tert refs, . GIFT OF JANE K.SATHER Mat i" U ep i] iawn LL hy | i MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT See AM na ‘od Ava ae i MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT BY G. ABBOTT-SMITH, D.D., D.C.L. PROFESSOR OF NEW TESTAMENT LITERATURE IN THE MONTREAL DIOCESAN THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE AND ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN THE ORIENTAL DEPARTMENT IN MCGILL UNIVERSITY NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS 1922 Printed in the United States of America Gree k VaTHEs Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2008 with funding from Microsoft Corporation https://archive.org/details/manualgreeklexicOOabborich PREFACE THE need of a new Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament will hardly be questioned. Thayer’s monumental work, deservedly the standard for more than thirty years past, and, supplemented by later literature, still likely to remain a standard of reference for some time to come, was rather too bulky to serve as a table companion to the New Testament for the average man. A smaller book, which would lend itself more readily to constant reference, has been a real and growing want for the student. This want has been enhanced by the progress of lexical study during the last quarter century. The study of verna- cular texts, which in recent years received a new impetus through the discovery of vast numbers of non-literary papyri, chiefly in Egypt, has removed all doubt as to the category to which the language of the New Testament belongs. It is now abundantly clear that the diction of the apostolic writers is not a peculiar isolated idiom, characteristic of Jewish Hel- lenists, but simply the common speech of the Greek-speaking world at the time when the New Testament books were written. While the statement just made has come to be a commonplace, it has not been so for long. There has arisen, therefore, the need not only of the collection and arrange- ment in convenient form (a need which is now being supplied for the advanced scholar in Moulton and Muilligan’s Voca- bulary of the Greek Testament) of the results of pioneer study in the papyri, but also of a systematic revision, in the light of recent research, of many of the views regarding the diction and vocabulary of the New Testament which were commonly accepted thirty or even twenty years ago. The considerations therefore—so well set forth by Dr. Moulton in his Prolegomena—which call for an entirely new grammar of the New Testament, apply also to the work of the Lexicographer. And the materials for his work—still vii Vili PREFACE steadily accumulating—have been liberally furnished by the special studies of Deissmann and Thumb in Germany and Moulton and Milligan in Great Britain and have also found their way into the more recent commentaries. The new impulse given to the study of the Septuagint by the publication of the Oxford Concordance by Hatch and Redpath, the Cambridge Manual Edition of the Septuagint and its accompanying Introduction by Dr. Swete, together with the Grammar of Mr. Thackeray, has also had its influence on New Testament studies. While Dr. Abbott's caution! as to the possibility of exaggerating the influence of the Septua- gint still holds good, the evidence of the papyri has brought about a growing sense of its value to the student of the New Testament. More reference therefore has been made, it 1s believed, in this Lexicon to the usage of the Septuagint than in any previous work of the same kind, so that even where there may not appear to be any special significance in the Old Testament usage with respect to a particular word, the student will always have an idea of the extent and character of the use which was made of it in that version which was the most familiar form of the Old Testament to the writers of the New. The books mentioned in the list which follows are, out of a larger number to which I would register here a general acknowledgement of indebtedness, those which appeared to be, on the whole, the more accessible and useful to the average reader. Among the Lexicons, an almost equal debt is owed to Liddell and Scott and to Thayer. The classifica- tion of meanings in the latter, a characteristic excellence, often defies improvement, while Preuschen, though on the whole adding little to the work of his predecessors, is often helpful in this same particular. Not a few suggestions of fresh treatment have come from Fr. Zorell, 8.J., whose scholarly work is quite modern and remarkably free from the ecclesiastical bias which one might have expected to find in it. Of the commentaries, besides those available to Thayer, the most helpful for lexical purposes have been those of Hort, Swete and Mayor in Macmillan’s Series, also the Inter- national Critical Commentaries, especially the more recent issues. Some of Bishop Lightfoot’s best lexical work is to be found in his posthumous Notes on Epistles of St. Paul, while Dr. Field’s Notes on the Translation of the New Testament, contain a wealth of learning and sound judgment 1 Hssays, 67 fi. PREFACE ix such as would be hard to parallel within the limits of a single volume. On points of grammar, references are mainly made to Dr. Moulton’s Prolegomena and the English Translation of Blass, as the most recent and convenient of first-rate authorities. A brief treatment is given of the more important synonyms, in the belief that while classical distinctions cannot always be pressed in late and colloquial usage, it is an advantage to know something of the distinctive features of synonymous words as traceable in their etymology and literary history. For the text of the New Testament the standard adopted is that of Moulton and Geden’s Concordance,! which, as the latest and best work of its kind, is likely to remain the re- cognised authority for many years to come. The Greek text followed therefore is that of Westcott and Hort, with which are compared the texts of the Kighth Edition of Tischendorf and of the English Revisers, the marginal readings of each being included. From the Textus Receptus as such, no reading which modern editors have rejected is as a rule re- corded, except in cases where a word would otherwise be dropped from the vocabulary of the New Testament. Some- times, also, reference is made to a reading of the Receptus to which some particular interest is attached. The asterisks and daggers in the margin follow, with the kind permission of the publishers and Mr. Geden, the notation of the Concordance. There is, however, the one difference, that whereas in Moulton and Geden the time limit marked by the dagger is the beginning of the Christian era, it seemed better for the purpose of the Lexicon to include in the category of “late Greek” all words found only in Greek writers after the time of Aristotle.” It remains to express in general terms my grateful acknowledgement to colleagues and friends in McGill Uni- versity with its affiliated Theological Colleges and in my own Alma Mater, the University of Bishop’s College, Lennoxville, as well as to many English friends, in Cambridge and else- where, who have given me valued advice and encouragement. All these will pardon me if I single out for special mention the one name of Dr. J. H. Moulton, the genial master-crafts- 14 Concordance to the Greek Testament, by Rev. W. F. Moulton, M.A, D,D., and Rev. A. S. Geden, M.A. Second Edition. T. & T. Clark, 1899, 2See below, p. xvi. xX PREFACE man of that science to which I have sought in a humble way to contribute what I could. At the beginning of my under- taking he took me in, a stranger, and gave me ungrudgingly of his counsel and direction, and also my first introduction to the publishers through whom the appearance of the work under the best possible auspices was assured. To the manifold assistance I have had from fellow-workers, both by word of mouth and through the printed page I would fain attribute most of the value which this modest effort may possess. For its deficiencies I am alone responsible, and I can only hope that in spite of them this book may sustain the note sounded in the last word in the alphabetical order of the New Testament Vocabulary—o¢éAryuwos—and may serve in a small way to the more faithful and intelligent study of the Book of the New Covenant of our Lord and Saviour in the language in which it was written. The foregoing paragraphs were written early in 1917, when, with the last sheets of the Lexicon, they were sent overseas for publication. The manuscript has thus been in- accessible for revision, whence the absence of any reference to much valuable material that has appeared, both in books and in periodicals, during the last four years, including the second volume of the Grammar of Dr. Moulton, whose tragic death as a victim of the ruthless warfare of the submarines was reported a few days after the earlier part of this Preface was written. The student is recommended to supplement the grammatical references in the body of the Lexicon by consulting the Index to Vol. II. of Dr. Moulton’s Grammar. I take this opportunity of adding to the acknowledgements already made my thanks to Professors A. R. Gordon and S. B. Slack of McGill University and to the Rev. R. K. Naylor, sometime classical tutor at McGill, for their kind- ness in proof-reading, to the publishers for their generous enterprise at a time of unprecedented difficulty in the pro- duction of books, and to the compositors and readers of the Aberdeen University Press for their painstaking and accurate performance of a difficult task. G. ABBOTT-SMITH. MontTRHAL, September, 1921. LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS I. GENERAL. abso] = absolute. impv. = imperative, acc. = accusative. in l. = in loco, act. = active. indice. = indicative. ad fin. = ad finem. inf, = infinitive. adj. = adjective. infr. = infra. ady. = adverb. lon. = Ionic. al. = alibi (elsewhere), lc. = loco citato. aor. = aorist. m. = masculine, Apocr. = Apocrypha. metaph, = metaphorically. App. = Appendix. meton. = metonymy. Aram. = Aramaic. MGr. = Modern Greek. Att. = Attic. n. = note, neuter, bibl. = biblical. neg. = negative. bis = twice. nom. = nominative. c. = cum (with). om. = omit, omits, cf. = confer (compare). opp. = opposed to, el. = classics, classical. optat. = optative. cogn. = cognate. pass. = passive. compar. = comparative. pers = person. contr. = contracted. pf. = perfect. dat. = dative. plpf. = pluperfect, e.g. =exempli gratia (for in- | prep. = preposition. stance), prop. = properly. eccl. = ecclesiastical. ptcp. = participle. esp. = especially. guts = quod vide, ex. = example. rei = of the thing. exc. = except. BG = sub. 5 = and following (verse). S.V. = sub voce. ff. = ee ss (verses). se. = scilicet (that is), fig. = figurative. seq. = sequente (followed by), freq. = frequent. subje = subjunctive. fut. = future. subst. = substantive, gen. = genitive. superl. = superlative, Gk. = Greek, supr. = supra. Heb = Hebrew. syn. = synonym. i.e. = id est. Targ. = Targum. ib. = in the same place, v. = vide. id. = the same. vb. = verb, impers, = impersonal, vl. = variant reading, impf. = imperfect. v.8, = vide sub, = Equivalent to, equals, < Derived from or related to, xi xil LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS II. BIBLICAL. (a) BOOKS. Septuagint. Ge = Genesis. Ez = Hzekiel, Ex = Exodus. Da = Daniel. Le = Leviticus. Ho = Hosea, Nu = Numbers. Jl = Joel. De = Deuteronomy. Am = Amos, Jos = Joshua. Ob = Obadiah. Jg = Judges. Jh = Jonah. Ru = Ruth. Mi = Micah I, 1 Ki =I, Il Kings (E.V., | Na = Nahum Samuel), Hb = Habakkuk, 11, Iv Ki = III, IV Kings (E.V., | Ze = Zephaniah, I, II Kings). Hg = Haggai. I, 11 Ch = I, II Chronicles. Za = Zachariah. 11 Ks =I]I Esdras (E.V., | Ma = Malachi. Ezra). 1 Ks = I Esdras. Ne = Nehemiah. To = Tobit. Es = Hsther. Jth = Judith, Jb = Job. Wi = Wisdom. Ps = Psalms. Si = Sirach, 1235 = Proverbs. Ba = Baruch. Ec = HKcclesiastes, Da Su = Susannah. Ca = Canticles. Da Bel = Bel and the Dragon, Is = Isaiah. Pr Ma = Prayer of Manasseh, Je = Jeremiah. 1-Iv Mac = I-IV Maccabees. La = Lamentations. New Testament. Mt = St. Matthew. 1,1 Th $$<=TI,II Thessalonians. Mk = St. Mark. Tee tT Li = I, II Timothy. Lk = St. Luke, Tit = Titus. Jo = St. John. Phm = Philemon, Ac = Acts, He = Hebrews, Ro = Romans. Ja = James. I, 11 Co = I, IJ Corinthians, 1 8 a od) = I, II Peter. Ga = Galatians. 1-111 Jo = LI John, Eph = Hphesians. Ju = Jude. Phl = Philippians. Re = Revelation. Col = Colossians, (6) VERSIONS AND EDITIONS. Al. = anon. version quoted | R (in LXX = Sixtine Ed. of LXX by Origen. refs.) (1587). Aq. = Aquila, Rec, = Received Text. AV = Authorized version. RV = Revised Version. B = Beza. R, txt., mg. = R.V. text, margin. E = Elzevir. Sm. = Symmachus, EV = English version (A.V. | T = Tischendorf. and R.V.). Ths = Theodotion. Gr. Ven. = Grecus Venetus. fir: = Tregelles. L = Lachmann. = Vulgate. Vg. LXxX = Septuagint. WH = Westcott and Hort. LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS xiii ITI. ANCIENT WRITERS. (i/, ii/, etc. = 1st, 2nd century, etc.) Ael. = Aelian, ii/A.D. Herm. = Hermas, ii/A.D. Asch, = Aschylus, v/B.C. Hes, = Hesiod, ix/B.C.? Aischin. = Adschines, iy/B.C. Hipp. = Hippocrates, v/B.C. Auth. = Anthology. Hom. = Homer, ix/B.C.? Antonin. = M. Aurel. Antoninus, Inscr, = Inscriptions. ii/A.D. Lue. = Lucian, ii/A.D. Apoll. = Apollonius Rhodius, Lys. = Lysias, v/B.C. Rhod. ii/B.C. Menand. = Menander, iv/B.C. Arist, = Aristotle, iv/B.C. TT. = Papyri. Aristoph, = Aristophanes, v/B.C. Paus. = Pausanias, ii/A.D. Ath. = Athanasius, iv/A.D. Phalar. = Phalaris, Spurius Epp. ? CIG ‘ = Corpus Inscriptionum Philo. = Philo Judeus, i/A.D. Grecarum. Pind. = Pindar, v/B.C. Dio Cass. = Dio Cassius, ii/A.D. Plat. = Plato, v-iv/B.C. Diod. = Diodorus Siculus, i/B.C. Plut, = Plutarch, ii/A.D. Diog. = Diogenes Laertius, Polyb. = Polybius, ii/B.C. Laert. 1i/A.D. Socr., HE = Socrates, Hist. Eccl., Dion. H. = Dionysius of Halicar- v/A.D. nassus, i/B.C. Soph. = Sophocles, v/B.C. Diosc. = Dioscorides, i-ii/A.D. Strab. = Strabo, i/B.C. Eur, = Euripides, v/B.C. Test. Zeb.= Testimony of Zebedee, Eustath. = Eustathius, xii/A.D. ii/A.D. FJ = Flavius Josephus, i/A.D. Theogn. = Theognis, vi/B.C. Greg. = Gregory of Nazianzus, Theophr. = Theophrastus, iv/B.C. Naz. iv/A.D. Thuc. = Thucydides, v/B.C. Hat. = Herodotus, v/B.C. Xen. = Xenophon, v-iv/B.C. Heliod. = Heliodorus, iv/A.D. ITV. MODERN WRITERS. Abbott, Essays = Essays chiefly on the Original Texts of the Old and New Testaments, by T, K. Abbott. Longmans, 1891, Abbott, JG = Johannine Grammar, by KE. A. Abbott. London, 1906. Abbott, JV = Johannine Vocabulary, by the same. London, 1905, AR = St. Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians, by J. Armitage Robinson, Second Edition. Macmillan, 1909, BDB = A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament, by Brown, Driver, and Briggs. Oxford, 1906. Blass, Gosp. = Philology of the Gospels, by F. Blass. Macmillan, 1898. Blass, Gr. = Grammar of N.T. Greek, by F. Blass, tr. by H. St. J. Thackeray., Macmillan, 1898. Boisacq = Dictionnaire Etymologique de la langue Grecque, par Emile Boisacq. Paris, 1907-1914. Burton = New Testament Moods and Tenses, by EH. de W. Burton. Third Edition. Univ. Chicago, 1898. CGT = Cambridge Greek Testament for Schools and Colleges. Charles, APOT = Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament, by R. H. Charles. Oxford, 1913. CR = Classical Review. London, 1887 ff. Cremer = Biblico-Theological Lexicon of N.T. Greek, by H. Cremer. Third English Edition, with Supplement, T. & T. Clark, 1886. Dalman, Gr. = Gramme-i* des jiidish-palaistinischen Aramiaish, by " G. Dalman, Leipzig, 1894 X1V Dalman, Words DAC DB DB 1-yol. DCG Deiss., BS Deiss., LAE EB Edwards, Lex. HGT Ellic, Enc, Brit. EHzp. Times Field, Notes Gifford, Inc. Grimm-Thayer Hatch, Hssays Hort ICC Interp. Comm. Jannaris JThS Kennedy, Sources Kiihner? Lit. Lft., Notes LS Mayor LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS = The Words of Jesus, by G. Dalman. English Edition, T. & T. Clark, 1902. Dictionary of the Apostolic Church, edited by J. Hastings. Vol. I. Scribners, 1915. = Dictionary of the Bible, edited by J. Hastings. (i-iv, evt. = extra vol.). Scribners, 1898-1904. = Dictionary of the Bible (in one volume), by J. Hastings. Scribners, 1909. = Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels, edited by J. Hastings. 2 vols. Scribners, 1907-08. = Bible Studies, by G. A. Deissmann, Second English Edition, including Bibelstudien and Neue Bibel- studien, tr. by A. Grieve. T, & T. Clark, 1909. = Light from the Ancient Hast, by A. Deissmann, tr. by L. R. M. Strachan. Second Edition. Hodder, 1908. = Hncyclopedia Biblica. 4 vols. London, 1899-1903. = An English-Greek Lexicon, by G. M. Edwards. Camb., 1912, = Expositor’s Greek Testament, = Commentary on St. Paul’s Epistles, by C. J. Ellicott. Andover, 1860-65. 5 vols, = Encyclopedia Britannica. Eleventh Edition. Camb. Univ. Press, 1910. = The Expository Times, edited by J. Hastings. T. & T. Clark, 1890 ff. = Notes on the Translation of the N.T., by F. Field, Camb,, 1899. =: The Incarnation, by E. Gifford. Hodder, 1897. = A Greek-English Lexicon of the N.T., being Grimm’s Wilke’s Clavis Novi Testamenti, tr. by J. H. Thayer. New York, 1897. = Essays in Biblical Greek, by Edwin Hatch, Oxford, 1889, = Commentaries on the Greek Text of the Hpistle of St. James (1!-47); The First Epistle of St. Peter (11-2!"); and the Apocalypse of St. John (1-3), by F. J. A. Hort. Macmilian, 1898-1909. = International Critical Commentary. Scribners. = Interpreter’s Commentary. N.Y., Barnes & Co. = A Historical Greek Grammar, by A. N. Jannaris. Macmillan, 1897. = Journal of Theological Studies. London, 1899 fi. = Sources of N.T. Greek, by H. A. A, Kennedy. T. Clark, 1895. = Ausfiihrliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache, by R. Kiihner. Third Edition, by F. Blass and B. Gerth, 4 vols,, 1890-1904, = Commentaries on St. Paul’s Epistles to the Galatians (1892); Philippians (Third Edition, 1873); and Colos- sians and Philemon (1892), by J. B. Lightfoot, Macmillan. Also Apostolic Fathers, by the same. 5 vols. Macmillan, 1890, = Notes on Epistles of St. Paul, by J. B. Lightfoot, Macmillan, 1895. =A Greek-English Lexicon, by H. G. Liddell and R. Scott. Seventh Edition. Harper, 1889. = Commentaries on the Epistle of St. James (Third Edition, 1910), and the Epistle of St. Jude and the Second Epistle of St. Peter. Macmillan, 1907. ALS tes LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS xV Mayser = Grammatik der gr. Papyri aus der Ptolemierzeit, by HE. Mayser. Leipzig, 1906. M‘Neile = The Gospel according to St. Matthew, by A. H. M'‘Neile. Macmillan, 1915, Meyer = Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the N.T., by H. A. W. Meyer. Eng. tr., T. & T. Clark, 1883. Milligan, Selections = Selections from the Greek Papyri, by G. Milligan. Cambridge, 1910. MM (xi-xxv) = Lexical Notes from the Papyri, by J. H. Moulton and and G. Milligan. Expositor VII, vi, 567 ff.; VIII, iv, 561 ff. MM (s.v.) = The Vocabulary of the Greek Testament, by J. H. Moulton and G, Milligan. Part I (a); Part II (6-8). Hodder, 1914-15 (remaining parts in preparation). M, Pr. = A Grammar of N.T. Greek. Vol. I, Prolegomena, by J. H. Moulton. Third Edition. Scribners, 1908. M, Th. = St. Paul’s Epistles to the Thessalonians, by G. Milli- gan. Macmillan, 1908. Moffatt = James Moffatt, An Introduction to the Literature of the N.T, Scribners, 1911. Mozley, Ps. = The Psalter of the Church, by F. W. Mozley, Cambridge, 1905. NTD = The New Testament Documents, by G. Milligan. Macmillan, 1913. Page = The Acts of the Apostles, by T. EK. Page. Macmillan, 1903. Rackham = The Acts of the Apostles, by R. B. Rackham. _ Methuen, 1901. Ramsay, St. Paul = St. Paul the Traveller and the Roman Citizen, by W. M. Ramsay. Hodder, 1895. The Epistle to the Hebrews, by F. Rendall. Mac- millan, 1911. Rutherford, NPhr. = The New Phrynichus, by W. G. Rutherford. Mac- millan, 1881. Rendall ll Schmidt = J. H. Heinrich Schmidt, Synonymik der Griechischen ! Sprache. 4 vols. Leips., 1876-1886, Simcox = W. H. Simcox, the Language of the New Testament, Second Edition. Hodder, 1892. Soph., Lex, = Greek Lexicon of the Roman and Byzantine Periods, by E. A. Sophocles. Scribners, 1900. | Swete = Commentaries on the Gospel according to St. Mark (Third Edition, 1909) and the Apocalypse of St. John, by H. B. Swete. Macmillan, 1906. Thackeray, Gr. =A Grammar of the O.T, in Greek I, by H. St. J. Thackeray. Cambridge, 1909. Thayer = Grimm-Thayer, q.v. Thumb, Handb, = Handbook of the Modern Greek Vernacular, by A. Thumb, ‘Tr. from the Second German Edition by S. Angus. T. & T. Clark, 1912. Thumb, Hellen. = Die Griechische Sprache im Zeitalter des Hellenismus, von A, Thumb. Strassburg, 1901. Tdf., Pr. = Novum Testamentum Graece, C. Tischendorf, Hditio octava critica maior, Vol III, Prolegomena, by C. R. Gregory. Leipzig, 1894. Tr., Syn. = Synonymsof the N.T., by R. C. Trench. Ninth Edition, Macmillan, 1880. Vau, = St. Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, by C, F. Vaughan, Sixth Edition, Macmillan, 1885. Veitch = Greek Verbs, Irregular and Defective, by W. Veitch, Oxford, 1887. XV1 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Viteau = Etude sur le grec du N.T., by J. Viteau. Vol. I, Le Verbe: Syntaxe des Propositions, Paris, 1893; Vol, II., Sujet: Complément et Attribut, 1896. VD, MGr, = E. Vincent and T. G. Dickson, A Handbook to Modern Greek. Second Edition. Macmillan, 1904. Westo, = Commentaries on the Gospel according to St. John, by B. F. Westcott, 2 Vols., Murray, 1908; the Epistle to the Ephesians, Macmillan, 1906; the Epistles of St. John, Third Edition, Macmillan, 1892. WH = The N.T. in the original Greek, by B. F. Westcott and F. J. A. Hort. Vol. II, Introduction and Appendix. Macmillan, 1881. WM = A Grammar of N.T. Greek, tr. from G. B. Winer’s 7th Edition, with large additions, by W. F. Moulton. Third Edition. T. & T. Clark, 1882. WS = Grammatik des neutestamentlichen Sprachidioms, von G. B. Winer, 8te Aufl, von P. W. Schmiedel. Gottingen, 1894, Zorell = Novi Testamenti Lexicon Graecum (Cursus Scripturae Sacrae I, vii), auctore Fr. Zorell, S.J. Paris, 1911. * A single asterisk at the beginning of an article denotes (as in Moulton and Geden’s Concordance) that the word to which it is attached is not found in the LXX or other Greek Versions of the O.T. and Apocrypha. ** A double asterisk similarly affixed denotes that the word occurs either in the Apocrypha or in the later Greek Versions of the O.T., but not in the LxXX Version of the Hebrew Canonical books, and therefore either has, as a rule, no (known) Hebrew equivalent, or else was used in a translation not kuown to the N.T. writers. The later Greek versions (Aq., etc.) are cited, as a rule, only when a word is not found in LXX. * A single asterisk placed after a list of passages from the LXX signifies tnat the word occurs nowhere else in that Version. +A dagger at the beginning of an article denotes that the word is not found in Greek writers of the classical period. +A dagger at the close of an article signifies that all the instances of the word’s occurrence in the N.T. have been cited. An inferior numeral after a biblical book (e.g. 111 Mac.) indicates the number of times a word occurs in that book. MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT A A, a, adda (q.v.), 76, indecl., alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet. As a numeral, a = 1,a,= 1000. As a prefix, it appears to have at least two and perhaps three distinct senses: 1. a- (before a vowel, dv-) negative, as in d-yyworos, a-ducos. 2. a-, a- copulative, indicating community and fellowship, as in d-rAods, d-KoAovbéw, a-dedpos. 3. An intensive force (LS, s. a), as in d-revif~w is sometimes assumed (but v. Boisacq, s.v.). "Aapdy (Heb. 7I79N), indecl. (in FlJ, -dvos), Aaron (Ex 4", al.) : Lk 1°, Ac 7“, He 54 71! 94+ “ABadiav (Heb. fitax, destruction; LXX, drodea, only in Wisdom Lit., of the place of the ruined dead: Jb 26° 2822 3112, Ps 8812, Pr 15!*), indecl.; in NT, Abaddon, the angel of the Abyss: Re 9".+ * &Bapis, -és (<< Bapos), without weight ; metaph. (MM, VGT, s.v.) not burdensome: 11 Co 119.+ *tABBd (T, -a), indecl. (Aram. NAN, emphatic form of AN = Heb. aN, father), used in the phrase ’A. 6 zarnp, Abba, Father (v. Swete on Mk, l.c.): Mk 14°6, Ro 85, Ga 46.+ *ABerdnvy, (T, Rec. *AB-), -js, 7 (Se. xepa), Abilene, a district in the Anti-Lebanon: Lk 3}.+ “ABed (WH, “A-), 6, indecl. (Heb. bam), Abel (Ge 421°): He 114 1274; aiua”A., Mt 2335, Lk 1151.+ "ABid (Heb. M23N, 3772N), 6, indecl. (in FlJ, “ABias, -a), Abia, Abyah. 1.80n of Rehoboam (mr Ki 141): Mt 17%. 2. A priest of the line of Eleazar (1 Ch 24° 1°): Lk 15.+ “ABid8ap, 6, indecl. (Heb. "MAN), Abiathar (1 Ki 211): Mk 2%6,+ "ABnrn, V.S. “ABeAnvy. "ABiou8, 6, indecl. (Heb. MAN), Abiud, Abshud: Mt 1%. "ABpadp (Heb. OFAN), 6, indecl. (in FlJ, “ABpapos, -ov; MM, VGT, s.v.), Abraham (Ge 17° al.): Mt 1)? al. iL Q MANUAL SREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT &-Buaaos, -ov (<< Ion. Bvocds = Bv60s), 1. in cl., boundless, bottom- less (e.g. d. wéXayos, &. wAotros, Aisch.). 2. [In LXX (for oinnM, Ge 1’, al.; exe. Is 4427, Jb 412 for nbz, mbixm, Jb 361 for am) and] NT, as subst. (MM, VG@T, s.v.), 7 4. (sc. xwpa), the abyss; (a) of the sea (Ge 12); (0) of the underworld, as the abode of the dead: Ro 10’ (a paraphrase of De 30! LXX); as the abode of demons, Lk 8%, Re 91+ % 11 117 178 20! 3 (Cremer, 2).t *AyaBos, -ov, 6, Agabus : Ac 118 21%°.+ *t dyaboepyéw, -&, to do good, show kindness : 1 Ti 618 (Cremer, 8).t dya8o-Troréw, -O (= cl. dyabor zovety, evepyeretv), fin LXX: Nu 10%, Jg 17a, Ze 12 (am hi.), To 1213B, 1 Mac 11°*, 1 Mac 1?*;] to do good ; (a) univ.: 1 Pe 2! 70 3617, 11 Jo 4; (6) for another’s benefit : Mk 384 ('T, dyadv roujoa), Lk 6°; (c) ace. pers., Lk 6% 3° (Cremer, 8).t *+t dyaBorrotia, -as, %) (<< dya0orovws), well-doing : 1 Pe 419.+ **t gyaoroids, -dv, = cl. dyafoupyds, [in LXX, of a woman who deals pleasantly in order to corrupt, Si 42'* ;] doing well, acting rightly (Plut.): 1 Pe 2!4 (Cremer, 8; MM, VGT, s.v.).t dyads, -7, -ov, [in LXX chiefly for 312;] in general, good, in physical and in moral sense, used of persons, things, acts, conditions, etc., applied to that which is regarded as “ perfect in its kind, so as to produce pleasure and satisfaction, . . . that which, in itself good, is also at once for the good and the advantage of him who comes in contact with it” (Cremer, 3): yf, Lk 8°; dédpov, Mt 718; xapdéa, Lk 81°; ddous, Ja 1)”; pepis, Lk 10"; epyov (freq. in Pl.), Phl 1°; edAmés, 11 Th 216; Onoavpos, Mt 1255; preia, 1 Th 36 (cf. 1 Mac 7°); as subst., ro a., that which is morally good, beneficial, acceptable to God, Ro 127; épyaleo- Oa 75 a., Ro 2!, Eph 4; apaococev, Ro 94, 11 Co 5; dudKew, 1 Th 54; pypetc Oa, U1J01; KodAAdoGar te d., Ro 12°; épwrav rept tod a., Mt 191"; dudkovos eis TO &., Ro 134; 7d a. cov, thy favour, benefit, Phm \4; pl., ra d., of goods, possessions, Lk 121°; of spiritual benefits, Ro 10%, He 911101. d. is opp. to zovnpdés, Mt 5* 201°; xaxds, Ro 71%; gatvaAos, Ro 911, 11 Co 51° (cf. MM, VGT, s.v.). SYN.: adds, Sdixavos. «. properly refers to goodliness as mani- fested in form: 4. to inner excellence (ef. the cl. xadds xéyabds and ev kapdia x. kai d., Lk 815), In Ro 5’, where it is contrasted with 6., a, implies a kindliness and attractiveness not necessarily possessed by the 8/cavos, who merely measures up to a high standard of rectitude (cf. éya8wovvn). *t &yaboupyéw, -@, contracted form (rare, v. WH, App., 145) of dyaoep- (q.v.), to do good: Ac 1417.+ tdyaQwodvn (on the termination, v.s. dyirys, and cf. WH, App., 152; MM, VGT, s.v.), -ns, 7 (<< dya60s), [in LXX for M3, 35M, 33M, only in Heb. bks. ;] goodness (representing “the kindlier, as dixatoovvy, the sterner element in the ideal character,’ AR, Hph., 5°; on its rela- tion to xpyordrys, v. Tr., Syn., § xiii): Ro 15!4, Ga 5%, 1 Th 1!.+ t dyadXlaots, -ews, 7 (<< dyaAXaw), [in LXX (most freq. in Pss. and MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 3 often coupled with , 1 Tim 4°10, He 19, r Pe 2!” 319, 17 Pe 215, 1 Jo 215, Re 1911, 2. Of divine love; (a) God’s love: to men, Ro 8*7; to Christ, Jo 335; (b) Christ’s love: to men, Mk 107!; to God, Jo 14%; c. cogn. ace., Jo 1776, Eph 24. SYN.: gig. From its supposed etymology (Thayer, LS; but v. also Boisacq) 4. is commonly understood properly to denote love based on esteem (diligo), as distinct from that expressed by ¢réw (amo), spontaneous natural affection, emotional and unreasoning. If this distinction holds, a. is fitly used in NT of Christian love to God and man, the spiritual affection which follows the direction of the will, and which, therefore, unlike that feeling which is instinctive and unreasoned, can be commanded as a duty. (Cf. dydrn, and v. Tr., Syn., §xii; Cremer, 9, 592; and esp. MM, VG@77, s.v.) + dydarn, -ns, 7, [in LXX for M358, which is also rendered by aydryots and didréa;| love, goodwill, esteem. Outside of bibl. and eccl. books, there is no clear instance (with Deiss., DAH, 18, 70,, ef. the same writer in Constr. Quar., li, 4; and with MM, VGZ, s.v., ef. Dr. Moulton in Exp. Times, xxvi, 3, 139). In NT, like dyardo, 1. Of men’s love: (a) to one another, Jo 13*°; (6) to God, 1 Jo 2°, 2. Of divine love; (a) God’s love: to men, Ro 5°; to Christ, Jo 1726; (b) Christ’s love to men: Ro 8%, 3. In pl., love feasts: Ju 2 (DB, iii, 157). Poe giria, 4., signifying properly (v.s. dyardw) love which chooses its object, is taken over from LXX, where its connotation is more general, into NT, and there used exclusively to express that spiritual bond of love between God and man and between man and man, in Christ, which is characteristic of Christianity. It is thus 4 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT distinct from quAéa, friendship (Ja 4* only), oropyn, natural affection (in NT only in compounds, v.s. doetopyos) and épws, sexual love, which is not used in NT, its place being taken by ériOvpia. (Cf. dyaraw ; and y. Abbott, Hssays, 70 f.; DB, vol. i., 555; Cremer, 13, 593; MM, VGT, s.v.) dyamntés, -7, -ov (<< dyardw), [in LXX chiefly for Tm, ™7;] beloved (v. M, Pr., 221); (a) by God: of Christ, Mt 3!"; of men, Ro 1’; (b) by Christians, of one another: 1 Co 4'*; freq. as form of address, ib. 10!4; opp. to éxOpes, Ro 11°8 (v. AR, Eph., 229; Cremer, 17; MM, VGT./S-¥.): “Ayap (Rec. ”A-), 4, indecl. (in FlJ, ’Aydpa, -ys; Heb. 133), Hagar (Ge 16): Ga 474: 2+ *dyyapedw (from the Persian; cf. Vg. angiare, and the Heb. m3N; on the orthogr., v. Bl, $6, 1; M, Pr., 46), to wmpress into public service, employ a courier; hence, to compel to perform a service (prob. common in the vernac.; cf. Deiss., BS, 86 f., MM, Eap., iv; VGT, s.v.): Mt 54! 2732, Mk 1521.t dyyetoy, -ov, To (< ayyos), [in LXX chiefly for %D 3] @ vessel (v. MM, VGT, s.v.): Mt 254.t dyyeXla, -as, 7 (<< dyyedos), [in LXX chiefly for Ayimw;] a mes- sage: 1 Jo 15 3! (Cremer, 18; MM, VG7, s.v.).t ayyédXw (ayyeAos), [in LXX for 33 hi.;] to announce, report: Jo 451 (WHR omit), 20'8§ (MM, VGT, s.v.).+ &yyeXos, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for Jxba;] 1. a messenger, one sent: Mt 11!°, Ja 27°, 2. As in LXX, in the special sense of angel, a spiritual, heavenly being, attendant upon God and employed as his messenger to men, to make known his purposes, as Lk 1", or to execute them, as Mt 4°. The a. in Re 1? 2!) al., is variously under- stood as (1) a messenger or delegate, (2) a bishop or ruler, (3) a guardian angel, (4) the prevailing spirit of each church, i.e. the Church itself. (Cf. Swete, Ap., in 1.; DB, iv, 991; Thayer, s.v.; Cremer, 18; MM, VGT,, s.v.) &yyos, -cos, 74, [in LXX for 3, 315D;] a vessel: Mt 1348.+ dye, prop. imperat. of dyw, come! used as ady. and addressed, like $épe, to one or more persons: Ja 413 51.t dyédn, -75, 7) (<< dyw), [in LXX chiefly for 1y;] a herd: Mt 83°32, Mk 511, 13 Lk 982, 33 + *t dyeveaddyntos, -ov (<< yeveadoyew), without genealogy, i.e. without recorded pedigree (cf. Ne 7°4): He 73 (Cremer, 152; MM, VGT7,s.v.). * ayers, -és (<< yévos), 1. unborn (Plat.); 2. of no family, ignoble, base (opp. to dyads, Soph., F’r., 105): opp. to evyevys, 1 Co 18 (for exx. from z., v. MM, VGT, s.v.).t+ dyidfw, Hellenistic form of dyilw (<< dy.os), to make holy, conse- crate, sanctify ; [in LXX chiefly for wp pi., hi. ;] 1. to dedicate, separate, MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 5 set apart for God ; of things: Mt 231719 1 Ti 271; of persons: Christ, Jo 108° 171%, 2. to purify, make conformable in character to such dedication: forensically, to free from guilt, 1 Co 61, Eph 5*6, He 24! 10? 14, 29 1312; internally, by actual sanctification of life, Jo 17!%19, Ac 20%? 2618, Ro 15'6, 1 Co 1? 74, 1 Th 5*8, Re 224; of a non- believer influenced by marriage with a Christian, 1 Co 744. 3. In the intermediate sense of ceremonial or levitical purification : (a) of things, 11 Ti 271; (6) of persons, He 9%. 4. to treat as holy: Mt 6°, Lk 11?, 1 Pe 315 (Cremer, 53, 602; MM, VGT, s.v.).t t dytacpds, -o0, 6 (<< dyidéfw), [in LXX: Ez 454 (wapn), Si 7%, etc. ;] as an active verbal noun in -yéds, it signifies properly the pro- cess 76 aydlev, rather than the resultant state, dywovvn, hence, 1. consecration; 2. sanctification: so strictly in Ro 61% 22 (but v. Meyer), 1 Co 1°°, 1 Th 4%7, 1 Th 213, He 1244, 1 Pe 12, Elsewhere it perhaps (Ellic.; but v. Milligan, Th., 48) inclines to the resultant state: 1 Th 4*, 1 Ti 21° (Cremer, 55, 602).t dytos, -a, -ov (<< 70 dyos, religious awe ; afw, to venerate), [in LXX chiefly for wp ;] primarily, dedicated to the gods, sacred (Hdt.; rare in Att., never in Hom., Hes. and Trag., who use dyvds), hence, holy, characteristic of God, separated to God, worthy of veneration. 1. Its highest application is to God himself, in his purity, majesty, and glory: Lk 1*°, Jo 17", Re 48. Hence (a) of things and places which have a claim to reverence as sacred to God, e.g. the Temple: Mt 2415, He 9; (b) of persons employed by him, as angels: 1 Th 338; prophets, Lk 17°; apostles, Eph 3°. 2. Applied to persons as sepa- rated to God’s service: (a) of Christ, Mk 174, Jo 6°, Ac 499; (6) of Christians, Ac 91°, Ro 1’, He 61°, Re 58. 3. In the moral sense of sharing God’s purity: Mk 67°, Jo 174, Ac 34, Re 37. 4. Of pure, clean sacrifices and offerings: 1 Co 7!4, Eph 1. SYN.: dyvés, pure, both in ceremonial and spiritual sense; iepés (sacer), sacred, that which is inviolable because of its (external relation to God; dovos (sanctus as opp. to nefas), that which is base on everlasting ordinances of right. (Cf. Tr., Syn., § lxxxviii; DB, ii, 399 f.; Cremer, 34, 594-601; MM, VGZ, s.v.) **t Gyudtns, -nTos, 7 (<< dys), [in LXX: m Mac 15?*;] sanctity, holiness, regarded, properly, as an abstract quality (v. next word, and ef. Lft., Notes, 49; MM, VGT, s.v.): 1 Co 1!2, He 1219+ tdywotvy (cf. dyabwovvn), -ys, 7 (<< dys), [in LXX: Ps 29 (30)4 96 (97)!2 (wy), 95 (96)® (tH), 144 (145)> (Tm), m Mac 3!2*;] holiness, the state in man resulting from dyuacpos, g.v.: Ro 14, 1 Co 7}, 1 Th 318 (Cremer, 52; MM, VGT, 8.v.).+ dyxddn, -9s, ) (< dyxos, a bend), [in LXX for "xy, p'n;] the bent arm: Lk 2°8 (cf. évayxaALoyar).t dyKuorpoy, -ov, 76 (< dyxos, a bend), [in LXX for ADK, etc.;] a fish- hook: Mt 1727,+ 6 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT * dykupa, -as, 7) (<< dyxos, a bend), [in Sm.: Je 52'8*;] an anchor: Ac 272% 30, 40; fio, (MM, VGT, s.v.), He 61°.+ *+t dyvados, -ov (= ayvarros, << yvdrrw, late form of kvdérrw, to card wool), wncarded, undressed, i.e. new (MM, VGT,s.v.): Mt 9°6, Mk 271.t dyveia (WH, ayvia), [in LXX for M77, M3, Wa, ete.;] purity : 1 Ti 412 52 (Cremer, 58. For exx. of ceremonial use in 7., v. MM, Exp., iv).t dyviLw (<< ayvos), [in LX X always ceremonially, chiefly for wap;] to purify, cleanse from defilement; (a) ceremonially: Jo 115°, Ac 2124, 26 9418; (6) morally: Ja 4°, 1 Pe 1, 1 Jo 3%.t SYNW.: xabapifw, q.v. (and v.s. acyvos). t+ dyviopds, -00, 6 (<< dyvifw), [in LXX: Nu 6° (433) 87 1917 (mNwN), etc. ;] purification: in ceremonial sense, Ac 2176 (XX) + dyvoéw, -&, [in LXX for mw, 13w, Hw, etc.;] 1. to be ignorant, not to know: absol., 1 Ti 1!%, He 52; c. acc., Ac 1827 1728, Ro 102, 11 Co 24; éy ois, 11 Pe 2!2; seq. or, Ro 24 63 71, 1 Co 148; od GéAw bas ayvoetv, a Pauline phrase: c. acc., Ro 117°; seq. imép, m Co 18; mept, I Co 121, 1 Th 4; om, Ro 1%, 1 Co 10! (for similar usage in z., v. MM, VGT, s.v.). Pass.: 1 Co 14%8, m1 Co 69, Ga 177. 2. not to understand : c. acc., Mk 922, Lk 94°.+ tdyvénpa, -tos, 76 ( (Oot things sealed elas ee 1 Pe 3?.+ SYN.: cidixpuys (q.v.),.pwre, primarily as winnowed, purged, first found in ethical sense in NT (sincere). On the equivalence of 4. and xafapos (q.v.), v. DCG, ii, 459*, though Westc. (Epp. Jo., 101) notes a distinction between them. *t &yvdtys, -TyTOS, 7) (, 33, etc.;] 1. to lead, bring, carry : C. acc., Seq. emi, cis, Ews, pds and simple dat.; metaph., to lead, guide, impel: Jo 1016, Ro 24, He 21°, m Ti 3°, al. 2. to spend or keep a day: Lk 2421, Ac 1988 3. Intrans., to go: subjunc., dywpnev, Mt 264, al. (Cremer, 61; MM, VGT, s.v.). dywyh, -7s, 7 (32;] captive: Lk 418 UXx),+ aidv, -Gvos, 6, [in LXX chiefly for ndiy, ty;] 1. incl., like Lat. aevum (LS, MM, VGT, s.v.), a space of time, as, a lifetime, generation, period of history, an indefinitely long period ; in NT of an indefinitely long period, an age, eternity, usually c. prep. (MM, VGT); (a) of the past: da ai. (cf. Heb. piv), Lk 17°; (0) of the future: cis r. ai. (cf. pdiy>), forever, Mt 21'"; id., c. neg., never, Jo 414; more strongly, ¢is tiv ai. Tod ai., He 18@XX); cis rods ai., Mt 618; cis tovs ai. rOv ai. (cf. Is 45'7, sy sbiy—Ty), Ro 16°’, LT; cf. also Eph 32}, m Pe 3!8, Ju 25, Re 144. 2. oi ai., the worlds, the universe, ‘‘ the sum of the periods of time, including all that is manifested in them”: He 1? 113 (cf.1 Ti 1", where zév ai. are prob. ‘“‘the ages or world-periods which when summed up make eternity”. 3. the present age (Heb. ni divin) : 6 ai., Mt 13%; 6 ai. otros, Mt 12°*; dviv ai, 1 Ti 6!"; 6 éverrasai., Ga 14; similarly, of the time after Christ’s second coming (Nan obdiyn), 6 ai. éxetvos, Lk 20°; 6 ai. wéAdwv, Mt 12°; 6 ai. 6 épxduevos, Mk 108°. SYN.: xécpos, the ordered universe, the scheme of material things ; oikovpevn, the inhabited earth ; in contrast with both of which ai. is the world under aspects of time (cf. Westc. on He 12; Tr., Syn., § lix; Thayer, s.v., ai.; Cremer, 74, 620; MM, VG@T). aidvios, -ov (as usual in Attic), also -a, -ov: m Th 216, He 912; (< aisv), [in LXX chiefly for ndiy ;] age-long, eternal, (a) of that which is without either beginning or end: Ro 167°, He 914; (6) of that which is without beginning: Ro 16”, 1: Ti 19, Tit 1?; (c) of that which is without end (MM, VGT, s.v.): oxnvai, Lk 16°; oixia, m Co 5}; diabyxn, He 1379; ebayyedvov, Re 14°; zapaxAnors, 1 Th 216; Avrpwors, 16 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT He 912; «Anpovouia, ib.!5; xéAacw, Mt 2546; xpiua, He 67; «pious, Mk 329; dAcOpov, 1 Th 19; zip, Mt 188; freq. c. Cwx, q.v. SYN.: didios, q.v. éxaSapata, -as, 7 (<< axd@apros), [in LXX chiefly for ONO, Now 3 uncleanness, impurity, (a) physical (MM, VGT, s.v.): Mt 2377; (6) moral: Ro 124 6!9, 1 Co 12?!, Ga 519, Eph 419 53, Col 35, 1 Th 28 47.+ *+ dxaldprns, -Tos, 7, uncleanness: Re 174, Rec. (for 7. dxd@apra).t axdBaptos, -ov (<< d- neg., cafaipw), [in LXX chiefly for NAW ;] wn- clean, impure ; (a) physically (LS, MM, VGT7, s.v.); (b) ceremonially : Ac 10428 118, 1 Co 714, 11 Co 617, Re 18?; (c) morally: Eph 5°, Re 174; Cc. wvedpa, a8 always in Gosp., Mt 101 1245, Mk 12% 26,27 311, 30 52, 8, 18 61729) 925" Tuk 438; 36.618 8 20)042 245 Ae 168") he 162(ch@remer 320).t+ *t dxapéopat, -odpar (<(dxarpos, wunseasonable), to have no oppor- tunity (opp. to edxarpéw) : Phi 41°.+ ** &xaipws, adv. (<< dxaipos, unseasonable), [in LXX: Si 35 (32)4 * 3] out of season, unseasonably : opp. to edxaipws (q.v.), 11 Ti 4? (cf. Cremer, 740; MM, VG, s.v.).t d-kakos, -ov, [in LXX for "np, OM, etc.;] (a) asincl. (Asch, Plat., al.), of persons, simple, quileless: Ro 1618, He 76 (cf. Cremer, 327); (0) of things, wndamaged (? MM, VGT, s.v.).t dxavOa, -ns, 7 (y), Wi 154, tv Mac 167 *;] unfruitful, barren: fig., Mt 1372, Mk 4'®, 1 Co 1414, Eph 51, Tit 314, mbes) Su l2:t **+t &-Katd-yvworos, -ov (<< xatayivwoxw), [in LXX: m Mae 447*;) not open to just rebuke, irreprehensible : Tit 2° (v. Cremer, 676; and for other exx., MM, VG, s.v.).t + d-Kata-kddumtos, -ov (7), Mt 10% (cf. ef-, éx-, kat-, tap-, cvv-dkoAovbéw). SyYN.: (cl.) éroua, not in NT (v. Cremer, 80; MM, VGT, s.v.). &xovw, [in LXX chiefly for yaw ;] to hear, listen, attend, perceive by hearing, comprehend by hearing. 1. Intrans.: Mk 4° 737, Ja 25, Re 2’, al.; 7. doiv, Mt 131°GXX); ¢@. cogn. dat., axon a. (Vv.S. dxox), Mt 13!, Ac 28°6@XX); 6 eywv dra (ots) dxovew, axovedrw, Mt 11”, Mk 473, Re 27, al. 2. Trans., prop. c. acc. rei, of thing heard, gen. pers., from whom heard (LS, s.v.): Ac 14; c. acc. rei, Mt 12!% Jo 38 (Abbott, JG, 76), Ac 22°, al.; c. dupl. acc., Jo 1218, 1 Co 11'8; c. gen. rei, Jo 74° (Abbott, JV, 116); 7. duvijs (cf. Heb. dpa say, Ex 181%), Jo 55,28, Ac 97 (on the distinction bet. this and 4. dwvyy, ib. 4, v. M, Pr., 66; Field, Notes, 117; Abbott, Hssays, 93f.); of God answering 2 18 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT prayer, Jo 931, 1 Jo 5'#15; ¢. ace. rei, seq. mapa, Jo 87% 40 Ac 1022, mm Ti 2?; id. seq. azo, I Jo 15; ; ¢ gen. pers. seq. ptep., Mk 1458, Lk 18°, al. (On NT usage generally, v. Bl., § 36, 5; Cremer, 82.) gid &xpaota, -as, 7) (<< dxparys, q.v.), [in LXX : 1 Mac 626 * sl in Arist. and later writers = dxpdrea (Lift., Notes, 222f.), want of power, hence want of sel f-control, incontinence : Mt 2375, 1 Co 7§.+ dkparis, -és (< xpdros), [in LXX: Pr 27°°*;] (a) powerless, im- potent ; (b) in moral sense, lacking self-control, incontinent : 11 Ti 3°.+ an -ov (<< nepeyrij)s pty Oe: Ps 74 (75)8 peu Je 32! (25!) (mam), m1 Mac 5?*]; wnmixed, pure: oivos, Re 14}°.+ dxpiBeva, -as, 7 (<< axpiBys), [in LXX: Da LXX tH 7'6 (x), Wi 1271, Si 167° 424 *;] exactness, precision (for exx., v. MM, VGT, s.v.): Ac 223.+ dxpBys, -és, [in LXX: Da LXX 245 6 (ax) 425, Hs 45, Si 1829 1925 34 (31)?4 35 ey * ;] exact, precise, careful, of ehings and persons: superl., Ac 26°.t ie ak acpoe, -& (<< dxpiBys), [in Aq.: Is 308 4916*;] to enquire with exactness, learn carefully: Mt 2716 (for similar ex., v. MM, VGT, 8.v.).t dxptBas, adv. (<< dxpiBys), [in LXX: De 1918 (am), Da TH 79 (ax), Hz 39!4, Wi 1918, Si 18?°*;] with exactness, carefully: Mt 28, Lk 13, Ac 187°, Eph 5, 1 Th 5? (M, Th., inl.). Compar., axpyBéorepov (Milligan, NTD, 111; MM, VGT, s.v.), Ac 1826 2315 20 2422 + dxpis, -(dos, 7, [in LXX chiefly for MaqN, also for Ign, etc. ;] a locust: Mt 34, Mk 16, Re 9% 7,+ *t &xpoatyptov, -ov, TO (<< dxpodopuat, to listen), a place of audience: Ac 252% (Plut.).t dxpoamys, ov, 6(v. supr.), [in LXX: Is 3 (wim), Si 329*;] ahearer: Ro 213, Ja, 122 23) 25,+ + dxpoBucrta, -as, 9 (perh. an Alexandrian form of cl. dxporoc6ia ; cf. MM, VGT, s.v.), fin LXX for my ;] the prepuce, foreskin (LXX), hence abstr., wncircumcision: Ac 11, Ro 225-27 330 410-12) 7 Co 718 19 Ga 56 615, Col 215 34. By meton., the uncircumcised: Ro 4°, Ga 27, Eph 211, + ¥ &xpo-yuvtatos, -aia, -atov (< dxpos, ywvia, an angle), fin LXX: Is 2816 (73)* ;] = Attic ywratos (freq. in Inser.; MM, VGT, s.v. a.), at the extreme angle: 6 d., the corner foundation stone, Eph 2°, 1 Pe 28.t * dxpoOinov, -ov, TO ()* 5] prop. a vagabond, hence, an impostor, a boaster: Ro 1°, 1 Ti 3?.+ SYN. : tBpiorys, trepypavos (v. Tr., Syn., § xxix; Lft., Notes, 256). é\addfw (onomat. from the battle-cry ddaAd), [in LXX chiefly for ym hi., 55";] prop. to raise a war-cry, shout with triumph or joy ; rarely of grief, to wail: Mk 5%8 (cf. Je 4°); of a cymbal, dAaAdZLov (RY. clanging), 1 Co 131 (cf. dAoAv{w).t ¥t &-AdAnTOS, -ov (<< AaAéw), inexpressible, not to be uttered : Ro 8?6,+ d-Nados, -ov (<< AdAos, talkative), [in LXX: Ps 30 (31)!8 (ndx ni.) 37 (38)}8 (ndx) *;] dumb, speechless : Mk 787 917,25 + ddas (T, ada), -aros, 7d, late form of el. dXs, -os, 6 (MM, VGT, 8.v.), [in LXX chiefly for mby ;] salt, lit. and fig.: Mt 5!3 95°, Lk 1454; like cl. ddes, wit, of wisdom and grace in speech: Col 4°.+ Gdeeds (Rec. arses, the older form; WH, App., 151), -éus, 6 (H 5] foreign, of another race (MM, VGT, s.v.); as opp. to a Jew, a Gentile: Ac 1078.+ &dws, adv. (<< ddXos), otherwise: 1 Ti 5*°.t ddodw, -@ (<< ddus, v.s. dAwy; and cf. MM, VGT, s.v.), [in LXX chiefly for was;] to thresh: 1 Co 9% 19, 1 Ti 518+ &-Noyos, -ov, [in LXX: Ex 6” (anpiy diy), Nu 6% (523), Jb 11%, Wi 1115 16 tv Mac,*;] 1. without reason, irrational: Ga, 11 Pe 2", Jul, 2. contrary to reason: Ac 2527 (v. MM, VGT, s.v.).t + adén, -ns, #, [in LXX: Ca 4! N (midqN)*;] the aloe, aloes (the powder of a fragrant wood): Jo 19%%.t ads, adds, 6, variant for ddas (q.v.): Mk 94°, Rec. WH, mg., R, mg.t éduKés, -7, -dv (< GAs), [in LXX for nog, ortiz ;] salt: Ja 312+ * duos, -ov (<< Avrn), free from grief: Phi 2°8.+ ** &duais, -ews, 7, [in LXX: Wi 17!7*;] a chain, bond: Mk 5* 4, Lk 879, Ac 126 7 2133 2820, Hph 679, 1: Ti 116, Re 20}.t * &-Nuattedijs, -és (cf. AvovreAew), unprofitable: He 131".t “Adoa, 76, indecl. (v.s. A), Alpha: Re 18 21° 2213 (vy. Swete, in ll.).t *ANpatos (WH, ‘Ad-), -ov, 6 (Aram. 999M), Alpheus. 1. Father of Levi: Mk 214, 2. Father of James: Mt 10%, Mk 3!8, Lk 615, Ac 133.+ &dwv, -wvos (for Attic dAws, -w, v. MM, VGT, s.v.), 7, [in LXX MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 23 chiefly for ]33;] a threshing-floor: Mt 3", Lk 31’ (here prob. by meton. = the grain on the threshing-floor).t &ddnné, -exos, f, [in LXX for byiw;] a for: Mt 82°, Lk 958; metaph., of Herod, Lk 13%?.+ ddwots, -ews, 7 (<< dAicxopar), [in LXX: Je 27 (50)** (wEM ni.)* 5] a taking, capture: 1 Pe 2}2.+ dpa, adv., at once (Lat. sumul): Ac 2476 2749, Ro 3” (one and all = Tym), Ps 14%), Col 4*,1 Ti 5, Phm ™; seq. ow, 1 Th 4'7 5; as prep. c. dat., together with: Mt 137° (v. MM, VGT;, s.v.) ; also, c. adv., a. mpwt (cl., d. €w, etc.), early in the morning : Mt 201.t ¥* Guabys, -és (<< pavOavw), [in Sm.: Ps 48 (49)'*;] unlearned, ignorant: 11 Pe 316 (on the rareness of this word, v. MM, VGZ7, 8.V.).t Me dpapdvtivos, -ov (<< dudpavros), of amaranth (Inser.); hence un- fading: 1 Pe 54.+ **+ dudpavtos, -ov (<< papaivoua), [in LXX: Wi 6” (codia)* ;] wn- fading (whence 6 4., the amaranth, an unfading flower): 1 Pe 1‘ (cf. MM, VGT, s.v.).t+ dpaptdévw (pres. formed from aor. duapreiv), [in LXX for nun, also for OWN, yw, etc.;] 1. to miss the mark (Hom., Aisch., al.), hence metaph. (Hom., al.), to err, do wrong. 2. In LXX and NT, to violate God's law, to sin (for non-Christian exx., v. MM, VGTZ, s.v.): absol., Mt 1875 274, Lk 17%, Jo 5!4 84 923 Ro Bi2 328 51%, 14, 16 615.1 Co.77% 86 1554; Hph 4°6, : Ti 579, Tit 3%, He 317 1026, 1 Pe 220, 11 Pe 24,1 Jo 119 2} 368 9 518; ¢, cogn. acc., a. duapriay (cf. Hx 32°, MND NY), 1 Jo 516; seq. eis, Mt 187, Lk 151%! 174, Ac 258 (xaioapa), 1 Co 618 8! (Field, Notes, 173); évwriov, Lk 151% 21; mpds Gévarov (cf. Nu 1822, miad nwm), 1 Jo 5!6 (Cremer, 98, 633).+ dpdprnpa, -ros, Td (< dyapreiy, Vv. supr.), [in LXX for mxNwn, Ty, etc. ;] an act of disobedience to divine law (Lft., Notes, 273), a sinful deed, a sin: Mk 3** 29, Ro 375, 1 Co 618, 11 Pe 1°, WH, mg.; aiwnoy a. (DCG, i, 788#), Mk 3?9 (for exx. from z., v. MM, VGT, s.v.).+ SYN.: dyvonua, apapria, dvouia, docBea, ArTnua, rapaBaors, Tapakoy, Tapavopuia, TaparTwua (v. Cremer, 100; Tr., Syn., §lxvi; DB, iv, 532; DCG, l.c.; Westc, Hiph., 165 f.). Gpaptia, -as, 7 ( Lik 16; Phi 2! 3% « Th'3!.( WH: me, -as) EHeSit, SYN.: duwpos, avéyxAytos, averiAnumrtos, q.v. (Tr., Syn., § ciil). d-péumrws, adv. (<( dweurros), [in LXX: Hs 31%*;] blamelessly (Lft., Notes, 28,89; MM, VGT7, s.v. -os): 1 Th 2) 318, WH, mg., 57%.t ** Guépusvos, -ov (<< pépmuva), [in LXX: Wi 61> 7°3*:)] free from anxiety or care: Mt 2814, 1 Co 7%? (for exx., v. MM, VGT, s.v.).t **+ @-wetdbetos, -ov (<< peratiOyur), [in LXX: mr Mae 51! *;] wm- mutable: He 618; as subst., 7d d., immutability, ib.” (v. MM, VGT, 8.v.).t * @-peta-Kivyntos, -ov (<< peraxwéw), immovable, firm: 1 Co 15°%.t * d-petapéAntos, -ov (<< petapéAouar), not repented of, wnregretted : Ro 129° 15 Conti *+ &uetavdntos, -ov (<< petavoéw), 1. ampenitent: Ro. 2. = dpera- peAntos (z., Philo, al.; v. Deiss., BS, 257; MM, VGT, s.v.).t * Guetpos, -ov (<< peérpov), without measure: adverbially, eis ra a., excessively, 11 Co 101% 15, + + dyyy, indecl. (Heb. JAN, verbal adj. fr. aN, to prop, ni., be firm), fin XX: 1 Ch 168*,)rniiss9**, Ne 51278%) Wore 140%. ma Macnen MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 25 Iv Mac 18%4 (elsewhere ”“N is rendered dAnOwes, Is 651%; dAnbas, Je 35 (28)°; yevorro, Nu 5%, De 2715®, m1 Ki 16, Ps 40 (41)!8 71 (72)}9 105 (106)48, Je 115)*.] 1. As adj. (cf. Is, l.c.),6a., Re 34. 2. Asadv., (a) in solemn assent to the statements or prayers of another (Nu, Ne, ete., ll. ¢.): 76 a., 1 Co 1416; (b) similarly, at the end of one’s own prayer or ascription of praise: Ro 17° 153, Ga 15, 1 Ti 11’; (c) in the Gospels, exclusively, introducing solemn statements of our Lord, truly, verily: Mt 51% 26, Mk 328 (v. Swete, in 1.), Lk 474, al.; a. d., always in Jo 15 33 5! al.; 76 vai, eat... 76 a, 1 Co 1? (on usage in z., v. MM, VGT, s.v.). *Guntwp, -opos, 6, 7 (<< pyrnp), without a mother (freq. in Gk. writers of the gods): drarwp a., of one without recorded genealogy, He 78 (cf. MM, VGT, s.v.). ** G-ulavtos, -ov (<< puaivw), [in LXX: Wi 31% 4? 829, m Mac 14%6 15%4* 5] undefiled, free from contamination (in 7., of aiéyp; MM, VGT, piv.)s He 7267194, 1 Pelt dale SYN. : dpwpos, domiAos (Cremer, 784). "ApwaddB, 6, indecl. (Heb. a3 %AaY), Amminadab: Mt 14, Lk 3°8 (WH om.).t &upos, -ov, 4, [in LXX chiefly for 5in;] sand, sandy grownd: Mt 726, Ro 927, He 11}2, Re 1218 208.+ dpvés, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for wa5;] a lamb: fig., of Christ (DCG, ii, 6206), Jo 12% 36, Ac 832(@XX) 7 Pe 1! (cf. dpviov; Cremer, 102, 635).+ ** GuotBy, -Hs, 7 (<< duetBopar, to repay) ; [in Aq.,Sm.: Pr 12, al. ;] requital, recompense : 1 Ti 54 (for illustration from 7., v. MM, VG7, 8.V.).t dpmeXos, -ov, 7, [in LXX for JpZ;] vine: Mt 262°, Mk 14°, Lk 2238, Ja 312; fig., of Christ, Jo 15145; of his enemies (on the usage here, v. MM, VGT, s.v.): Re 141% 19+ dpmredoupyss, -0d, 6, 7, [in LXX for O95;] a vine dresser: Lk 137.+ dpmehdv, -Ovos, 6 (<( duzredos), [in LXX for 093;] a vineyard: Mt 20! * 2128) Lk 136 20°%, 1Co 97, (Adschin., 49, 13; Diod., al.; v. MM, VGT, s.v.; LS, s.v. dumedoupyeiov.) *Apmdtatos (T, -iaros; Rec. “Aurdids; v. MM, VG@T’, s.v.), -ov, 6, Ampliatus : Ro 16%.t duvo, [in LXX (mid.): Jos 10 (apa), Ps 117 (118)1*12 (39 hi.), Ts 591° (yw hi.), Wi 11°, al.;] to ward off, etc. Mid. (a) to defend oneself against ; (b) to requite; (c) = act., to defend, assist (Is, l.c.): c. acc. pers., Ac 774 (MM, VG7, s.v.).t dpdidlw (<< audi, on both sides: v. M, Pr., 100), Hellenistic for dudievvye (cf. MM, VG@T, s.v.), [in LXX for wad, etc.;] to clothe: Lk 12°8 (T, -e{e).+ : dppu-Bdddw (v. supr.), [in LXX: Hb 1!7*;] = repiBarru, to throw around, as a garment: absol. (MM, VGT’, s.v.), of casting a net: Mk 1?¢ (Rec. BddAovras aupiBAyorpor).t 26 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT dppiBrnotpov, -ov, Td (()) any)* 5] a refreshing: Ac 3}*.+ dva-ixw, [in LXX for wp ni., mn, etc. (freq. in sense of revive, refresh oneself) ;| to refresh: c. acc. pers., 11 Ti 116 (MM, VGT, s.v.; Cremer, 588).t * av8pamodioThs, -00, 6 (Y), Eph 5*!. As a prefix, dvr- (before vowels dvr-, av6'-), denotes (a) over against, dvturépay ; (b) co-operation, évr.Badrew 5 (c) requital, dvryuchia; (d) opposition, daytixpicros; (e) substitution, avO@vratros. Compounds of a. usually govern dat. (Bl., § 37, 7).+ ** Gyr-Bdddo, [in LXX : 1 Mac 11'8*;] to throw in turn, exchange : metaph., Acyous (cf. Lat. conferre sermones ; v. Field, Notes, 81), Lk 2417.+ *+ dvti-81a-TiOnpr, in mid. to place oneself in opposition, oppose: u Ti 275 (EV; but v. Field, Notes, 215f.; cf. MM, VGT, s.v.). dvti8iKxos, -ov (<< déxn), [in LXX for 2 ;] as subst., an opponent in a lawsuit, adversary: Mt 57°, Lk 125° 188, 1 Pe 58 (Cremer, 696; MM, VGT, s.v.).t * dyri-Bears, -ews, 7) (<< riOnpr), opposition: 1 Ti 629,t dvri-ka8-lornpt, [in LXX: De 317! (Max), Jos 57, Mi 28 (p37) *;] 1. causal in pres. impf. fut. and 1 aor.; to replace, oppose. 2. Intrans. in pass. and 2 aor. act.; (a) to swpersede ; (b) to resist: He 124.+ * dvri-Kahéw, -@, to invite in turn: Lk 14}2.+ dvti-kepat, [in LXX for DN, WY, quiz, etc.;] 1. to he opposite to. 2. to oppose, withstand, resist: c. dat., Lk 1317 2115, Ga 517, 1 Ti 1°; as participial subst. (6) dvrixecuevos, 1 Co 16°, Phl 18, 1 Th 24, 1 Ti 5!4 (Cremer, 746).+ ** dytuxpus (Tr. -vs, Rec. dvruxpv), adv. (<< dvri), [in LXX: Ne 128 (1335), ut Mac 5'6*;] in cl., outright ; in xour (= el. xatayrixps), over against: Ac 201 (v. Bl, §5, 4; 40, 7; Rutherford, NPhr., 500£.; MM, VGT, s.v.).t évti-AapBdve, [freq.in LXX for pin hi., yan, ete. ;] to take instead of or in turn. Mid., c. gen., to take hold of ; (a) of persons, to help (v. MM, VGT, s.v.): Lk 154, Ac 20%; (6) of things, to partake of: 1 Ti 6? (v. Field, Notes, 210; Cremer, 386; and cf. cvv-avriAapBdvw).t évti-héyw, [in LXX : Ho 44 (a hi.), Is 505(33D ni.) 2222 652, Si 425, tar Mac 278, rv Mac 47 8?*;) contradict, oppose, resist (v. Field, Notes, 106; MM, VGT;, s.v.); absol.: Ac 28!%, Ro 10?!, Tit 19 29; c. dat., Jo 1912, Ac 134°; c. acc. et inf., Lk 2027 T; pass., Lk 234, Ac 2822,+ dvti-Anpies, (Rec. -Anys; v. MM, VGT s.v.; M, Pr., 56), -ews, 9 (<< dvriAapBavoua), [in LXX for tz, yint, etc., freq. in Pss and 11, 111 Mac.; freq. also in 7. in petitions to the Ptolemies in sense of Borybea (v. Deiss., LAH, 107; BS, 92, 223);| 1. cl. a laying hold of, an exchange. 2. Hellenistic (LXX, 7.) help: pl. of ministrations of deacons; 1 Co 126 (DB, ii, 347 f.; Cremer, 386).t+ dvti-Anis, V.S. dvTiAnpyis. dytidoyla, -as, 7 (<( dvruAdyw), [in LXX chiefly for 2795] gain- saying, strife (the latter sense being found in 7.; v. MM, VGT7, s.v.; ef. Field, Notes, 106): He 616 77 123, Jul.t 42 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT * dvtt-NowSopéw, -d, to revile in turn: 1 Pe 273.t **+ dvri-hutpov, -ov, 76, [in Al.: Ps 48 (49)®*;] a ransom: 1 Ti 28 (v. CGT’, in 1.; and cf. Avrpov).t *+ dvti-petpéw, -@, to measure m return: Lk 6° (WH, mg,, peTpew).t *+ dvripioia, -as, ) (<< dvripcOos, for a reward), a reward, requital : in good sense, 11 Co 61%; in bad sense, Ro 127 (MM, VGT, s.v.).t "Avridxeta, -as, 9, Antioch ; 1. in Syria: Ac 111% 20 22s 26, 27 131 1426 1522s 23, 30, 35 1822, Ga 211. 9. In Pisidia: Ac 1314 141% 21, rr Ti 311.+ *Avtioxeus, -ews, 6, a citizen of Antioch, an Antiwchian: Ae 6°.t **+ @vri-map-épxopat, [in LXX: Wi 16!°*;] to pass by opposite to: uk 1031: 32 (MM: VGZ" s.y.)ch ’Avtitmas (T, ’Avreizas), -a (in some MSS. it appears to be indecl. ; but v. M, Pr., 12; it is abbrev. from ’Avrizarpos), 6, Antipas: Re 213.t *Avtitatpis, -lOos, 4, Antipatris, bet. Joppa and Caesarea: Ac 2331,+ *t avri-mepa (Rec. dvturépav, LTr. dvtirépa), adv., = cl. avrurépas (MM, VGT, 49), on the opposite side: c. gen., Lk 876.+ dvri-winre, [in LXX: Ex 265 (53), ib.1” (adw), Nu 2714 (nA), Jb 233 (a3w hi.) *;] 1. to fall against or upon (Arist., Polyb.). 2. to strive against, resist (Arist.): ¢. dat., Ac 751.+ * dvtt-otpatevopat, to make war against: c. dat., Ro 7?3.t dvtt-tédcow (Att., -rrw), [in LXX for yr hi., Nw3, etc.;] to range in battle against ; mid., to set oneself against, resist: absol., Ac 18°; c. dat., Ro 13?, Ja 46 5°, 1 Pe 55 (MM, VG7,, s.v.).t ** @yti-tutros, -ov (V.S. TUzos), [in LXX: Hs 3% A*;] 1. act. striking back ; metaph., resisting, adverse. 2. Pass. struck back ; metaph., corres- ponding to (MM, VGT’,,s.v.); (a) as impression of a seal or copy of an archetype (rvzos) (RV, like in pattern), He 974; (b) as the reality (of which rvos is the copy or adumbration) (RV, after a true likeness), 1 Pe 3?! (Cremer, 357).t *t dvti-xptotos, -ov, 6, Antichrist, ‘one who assuming the guise of Christ opposes Christ” (Westc., Hpp. Jo., 70): 1Jo 21% ?2 43 1 Jo’; pl. 1 Jo 2! (cf. pevddxpioros, and v. MM, VGT’, s.v.).t évthéw, -@ (<< avtAos, bilge-water in a hold), [in LXX for anw, etc.;] 1. prop., to bale owt. 2. Generally, to draw water: absol., Jo 28 415; JSwp, Jo 2° 47 (on its use of the water made wine, v. DCG, ii, 8153; MM, VGT, s.v.; Field, Notes, 84 f.).t *t dvtAnpa, -Tos, TO (<< dvtAew), (a) prop., what is drawn (Diosc.) ; (6) a vessel to draw with, a bucket (Plut.; v. Abbott, Hssays, 88): Jo 411+ **t avtopOarpew, -O (dvri, opOaros), [in LXX: Wi 12!4*;] to look in the face, look straight at (Polyb.). Metaph., to face, withstand (Wi, lic., Polyb.): ¢. dat., a. 7. dvéuw, as nautical term, to beat wp against the wind (v. DB, ect., 366f.; MM, VGT, s.v.): Ac 2715+ dvuSpos, -ov (< d- neg., vdwp), [in LXX for Mx, PIMw (y7 a), MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 43 etc. ;] waterless: roma, Mt 12, Lk 1174; wyyai, un Pe 217; vepeda, Ju (MM, VGT, s.v.).t ** &y-umrdpitos, -ov (<< d- neg., troxpivoyins); [in LXX : Wi 518 1816 * 5) unfeigned : Ro 12°, 1 Co 6°, 1 Ti 15, m Ti 1°, Ja 31’, 1 Pe 1°? (Cremer, 380; MM, VGT, s.v.).+ **+ dvuTdtaktos, -ov (<< d- neg., trordoow), [in Sm.: 1 Ki 2)? 10°? (for LXX, Aowds, 53753 132)*;] of things, not subject to rule: He 28; of persons, unruly: 1 Ti 1°, Tit 1% 1° (MM, VGT, s.v.).t dvw, adv. (<< avd), (a) up, ae Jo 1142, He 1235; (0) above (opp. to Kdrw) : Ac 2!9; with art. Ga 476, Phi aa au. oO. Oo, Col 342; ews a. (up to the brim), Jo 2" (Giawsn 106 ; MM, VGT, Biv.) + dvdyatov, dvwyeorv, V.8. avaryatov. dvabev, adv. (<< dvw), (a) from above: aro a., Mt 27°!, Mk 15°8; éx trav d., Jo 198; meaning, from heaven: Jo gal 194), Ja 127 315 17; (0) from the first, from the beginning: Lk 18, Ac 265; whence (c) anew, again: Jo 3%", (so most, but v. Meyer, in 1; ; ef. Field, Notes, 86f.) ; médw a., Ga 4° (MM, VGT, S.v.).t * avwrepinés, -7), -ov (<< avisrepos), wpper: Ac 19}.t dvérepos, a, -ov, [in LXX: Ne 325 (gnby), Ez 417 (Sy), To 88* 5) only in neut., as adv. (cf. sapih ged (a) of motion, higher: Lk 141°; (0) of rest, above, before : He 108.t é&v- LadeXis, -és (a- neg., ddeXos), [in LXX: Is 441° (Hyin sna), Je 28 (syin Nd), Pr 283, Wi 1 *;] unprofitable: Tit 3°; neut. as subst., wnprofitableness : He 718.+ dgivy, -ns, 4, [in LXX for 772, O92;] an ave: Mt 3, Lk 3% détos, -a, -ov (<< dyw, in sense, to weigh), [in LXX for 7, (De 252), xd, mw; freq. in Wi, 1 Mac;] (a) of weight, worth (often c. gen., cf. Pr 315 81), seq. mpds: Ro 818 (v. Field, Notes, 157); (0) ment meet: c. gen., Mt 38, Tk 38 2341, Ac 2679, 1 Co 164 ty. BE er. absol., 11 Th 1; (c) of persons, worthy ; (a) in good sense: c¢. gen. rei, Mt 102, Lk 74 ‘107, Ala ge a8 be Gt: e. aor. inf. (v. M, Pr., 203) : Lk 15%, 38 Ac 13%, Re 411 52419 12; ; seq. va: Jol?’; ds, Lk 74 absol., but of what understood: Mt 10418 228, Re 3*; c. gen. pers., Mt 1037 88, He 113°; (@) in bad sense; c. gen. rei, Lk 124% 235, Ac 2329 2511526 2631, Ro 182; absol., Re 16° (MM, VGT, 8.v.).t déidw, -3 (< d£.0s), [fin LXX chiefly for NY, wp2; freq. in Wi, 1, 1 Mac;] (a) to deem worthy: c. acc. et inf. (v. MM, VGT, s.v., and cf. xat-agiow), Lk 77; id. et gen. rei, 1 Th 1"; pass. c. gen. rei, 1 Ti 517, He 3° 1029; (b) to think fit: c. inf. (v. M, Pr., 205), Ac 1538 2822.4 ** G£iws, adv., un LAX We- te? 16", Si 14u*] worthily : Ro 162, Eph 4', Phi 127; c. gen. (freq. in Inser.; Deiss., BS, 248; MM, VGT, 51), a. 7. Kishi) Col 110; +, Geod, 1 Th g12, Ill Jos, rr ddpatos, -ov (<< anaaan [in LXX: Ge 1? ann), Is 453 (ANP), 11 Mac 9°*;] unseen, invisible: Ro 12°, Col 11516, 1 Ti 117, He 1127,t 44 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT dn-ayyéAdo, [in LX X chiefly for 133 hi. ;] of a messenger, speaker, or writer, to report, annownce, declare: c. acc. rei, Ac 47%, al.; c. dat. pers., Mt 28, al.; seq. or, Lk 18%”; was, Lk 8°; wept, Lk 718 13}, Ac 2871, 1 Th 19; A€ywy, Ac 226; ¢. acc. et inf., Ac 1214; seq. eis, Mk 514, Lk 8°4 (MM, VGT, s.v.; Cremer, 25). an-dyxo (<< dyyxw, to press, strangle), [in LXX: 1 Ki 173 (pan), To 3!°*;] to strangle; mid., to hang oneself (or, to choke; v. M, Pr., 155): Mt 275.+ an-dyw, [in LXX for ama, 75m hi., etc. ;] to lead away: Lk 13%, Ac 2317 247 (R, mg.), 1 Co 12?; esp. of leading to trial (so as law term in Attic), prison and death (MM, VGT, s.v.): Mt 2697 272) 31, Mk 1444 58 1516, Lk 2112 2266 9326, Ac 1219; of the direction of a way: Mt 71%)14 (cf. cvv-ar-dyw).t é-maiSeutos, -ov (<< radevw), [in LXX for SDD, etc., chiefly in Wi. lit.;] wninstructed, ignorant: 1 Ti 273,+ dn-aipw, [in LXX chiefly for yp3 ;] to lift off, hence, to take away ; pass.: Mt 915, Mk 22°, Lk 5%5.+ dm-attéw, -G, [in LXX: De 15%, al. (i733), Si 2015, Wi 158, al. 5] to ask back, demand back: Lk 6%° 127° (MM, VG@T, s.v.).t * dm-adyéw, -@, 1. prop., to cease to feel pain for (Thue., ii, 61). 2. In late Gk. (a) to despair (Polyb., i, 35, 5); (b) to become callous, reckless (Polyb., xvi, 12,7; MM, VGT7, s.v.): Eph 419.+ dm-addAdoow, [in LXX for 0 hi., etc. ;] to remove, release : He 215; pass., to depart: Ac 1912; in legal sense (MM, VGT, s.v.), seq. dzd, c. gen. pers., to be quit of : Lk 12° (Cremer, 90, 632).t dm-addotptow, -G, [in LX X for 97, 33, etc. ;] to alienate, estrange ; pass.: Eph 2}? 418, Col 121 (MM, VGT7’, s.v.; Cremer, 95, 633).+ amahds, -7, -dv, [in LXX for 74;] tender: Mt 24%, Mk 1378.+ dmavtdw, -©, [in LXX chiefly for y3p;] 1. to go to meet. 2. to meet ; c. dat.: Mk 1413, Lk 17!2 (WH, mg., iz-; in Ree. freq. as v.l. for iz-, q.v.).t ardvryats, -3), to go after, follow: Mk 1°, Jo 12!°; metaph., Mk 14”, Re 211. dn-éxw, [in LXX chiefly for pnn;] 1. trans., (a) to hold back, keep off; (b) to have in full, to have recewed (on the “ punctiliar’’ force of the compound, v. M, Pr., 109, 247): c. acc., Mt 6% 16 Tk 674, Ph] 418, Phm?® (for illustr. from 7., where it is used in receipts, v. Deiss., BS, 229; LAH, 110f.; MM, s.v.); impers., aréye (Field, Notes, 39), it is enough: Mk 14*'. 2. Intrans., to be away, distant: absol., Lk 1529; seq. dad, Mt 1424 15°, Mk 7°, Lk 76 157° 248, Mid., to abstain: c. gen., Ac 15°, 1 Ti 48,1 Pe 2"; seq. dd, Ac 157, 1 Th 4° 522+ ** émotéw, -@ (<< dros), [in LXX: Wi 1? 107 12'7 1838, Si 127, 1 Mac 813*;] to disbelieve, be faithless : Mk 16416, Lk 2417) 41, Ac 2874, 1 Pe 27; so prob. also Ro 3%, m Ti 2!8 (ICC, CGT, in ll.; MM, s.v.). 2. = dwrabéw (Hdt.; on this sense in Ro, 1 Ti, ll. c., v. Vaughan on Ro, l.c.; Lft., Notes, 265; Thayer, s.v.).t ** @muotia, -as, 7 (<< dros), [in LXX: Wi 14%, tv Mac 12**;] want of faith, unbelief : Mt 1358, Mk 6° 974 1614, Ro 3% (but v.s. drioréw) 420 112023 7 Ti 118, He 31% 19 (DCG, ii, 775%; Cremer, 492).t d-muoros, -ov (<< d- neg., muords), [in LXX: Pr 17° 2879, Is 171° * 5] (a) of things, incredible: Ac 268; (b) of persons, without faith or trust, unbelieving: Mt 1717, Mk 9%, Lk 94 1246, Jo 2077, Tit 14°, Re 218; specif., of unbelievers as opp. to Christians: 1 Co 6% 71215 107 1422-24, 11 Co 44 61415, 1 Ti 58 (cf. Lift., Notes, 265; Cremer, 491).t amhérys, -7Tos, 7 (<< drAots), [in LXX: m Ki 15" (OM), 1 Ch 2917 (aad "Wi, 4. ris xapSias, cf. Col 322, where v. Lft.), Wi1?, al. ;] simplicity, sincerity: Ro 128, m Co 11%, Eph 6°, Col. 3”; as manifested in generous, unselfish giving, liberality, graciousness: 11 Co 8? 9!) 18 (v. ICC, Ro., 128; Hort, Ja., 15, and v.s. dmAds).t Gm)\dos, V.S. arAovs. - Gmdois, -7, -odv (contr. fr. -dos; . 3. to decimate (Socr., HE, 573 A; v. Kennedy, Sources, 117).t *t Gd-Sextos, -ov (<< drod€xopar), acceptable: 1 Ti 2° 54.+ ** @mro-Béxonar, [in LXX: To 7'’, Jth 13!%, -1v Mac ,,)*;] to accept gladly, welcome, receive: Lk 84° 911, Ac 1877 2117 2839; metaph., c. ace. rei, Ac 24! 243 (MM, s.v.; Cremer, 688).t+ dtro-Sypew, -@ () to press hard: Lu 84,t é1ro-OvyoKw, [in LXX chiefly for m1;] to die: of natural death, Mk 5*, al.; of violent death (pass. of droxreivw), esp. of Christ, Mt 26%, Jo 1233, He 1028, al.; of spiritual death, Jo 659, Ro 83, al.; c. dat. ref., Ro 62 19 14% 8 Ga 219; acc., 6, Ro 61°; seq: ev, Mt 8*2) Jo 82424 1 Co 1572, He 1137, Re 1418; seq. taép, wept, Jo 115% 5! 1814, Ro 58 1445 Co 15°, m'Co 54, 1 Th 5!°, 1 Pe 31°; amo, Col 279: ex, Re 82); fig., 1 Co 15%! (cf. cvv-aro6vycKw, and v. Milligan, NTD, 258 f.; DCG, i, 791b; Cremer, 286; MM, s.v.; on the perfective force of this verb, M, Pr., 112,114; and on the distinction bet. pres. and aor., ib. 113 f.). G1ro-ka0-toTdvw, aroxabioraw, see next word. dro-Ka0-iotnpe (droxafictaw, Mk 9!", Rec., -cravw, LTTr.; cf. Ac 16; -xatiaravw, WH), [in LXX chiefly for a1w;] 1. to restore, i.e. to a former condition: of health, Mt 1285, Mk 35 825, Lk 61°; of social or political affairs, Mt 174, Mk 917, Ac 16, 2. to give back, bring back: He 13!9 (so in z., MM, s.v.; cf. also Cremer, 312).t do-kahintw, [in LXX chiefly for m532;] 1. in general sense (cl.), to reveal, uncover, disclose, (a) of things: Mt 1076, Lk 285 12?, 1 Co 318; (b) of persons: pass., Christ, Lk 173°; Antichrist, 1 Th 2% % 8, 2. In LXX and NT, in special sense of divine revelation: Mt 11?° (on theitense, v. Mi Pr.) 136) ib. 2" 16!) Lk 102422 Jo lake Ro Tater Gt I Co 210 143° Ga 116 325, Hph 35, Phl 315, 1 Pe 15 12 5! (Westc., Eph., L(Sf Me Tne Ag ft SYN.: davepow (v. Thayer, 62; Cremer, 342). + dro-Kddupis, -ews, 7 ()*;) 1. in cl., only in phrase drocraciov dixy, an action against a freedman for forsaking his rpoorarys (Dem.). 2. In LXX, BiBXrlov arootaciov, a bill of dworce: Mt 197, Mk 104; in same sense d. alone (MM, s.v.), Mt 5%! (for other late exx., v. MM, l.c.; Kennedy, Sources, 121).+ ** dro-oteydlw (<( oreyn), [in Sm.: Je 491° (29")*;] to unroof: Mk 24.+ dmo-oTéAhw, [in LXX very freq., almost always for mbw;] prop., to send away, to dispatch on service; 1. to send with a commission, or on service; (a) of persons: Christ, Mt 10%; the apostles, 101°; servants, Mk 127; angels, 13°”; (6) of things: dvos, Mt 21; 7d dpe- mavov, Mk 4”°; +r. Xoyov, Ac 10°°; 7+. éwayyediay (i.e. the promised Holy Spirit), Lk 244°, Rec. ; seq. eis, Mt 207, Lk 11*, Jo 3!7; driow, Lk 1914; eutpoobev, JO 378; zpd mpoowrov, Mt 1119; wpos, Mt 21%4; with ref. to sender or place of departure: aad, Lk 12° (Rec. tc); rapa, Jo 18; éx, ib. 119; t76, Ac 10!" (Rec. do); seq. inf., Mk 344, al.; tva, Mk 122, al.; eis (of purpose), He 14; without direct obj.: seq. zpos, Jo 5%; Aeywv, Jo 11°; aooreidas, c. indic., Mt 216, Ac 714, Re 1'. 2. to send away, dismiss: Lk 418, Mk 5!° 876 123 (cf. e&-, cvv-aroareddw). SYN.: wéurro, the general term. 4. ‘‘ suggests official or authori- tative sending” (v. Thayer, s.v. reu7w; Westc., Jo., 298; Epp. Jo., 125; Cremer, 529; MM, s.v.). dtro-aTepéw, -@ (<< orepéw, to rob), [in LXX: Ex 21)° (y 43), De 2414 (pwy), Ma 3°, Si 41 29% 7 31 (34)? 22 *;] to defraud, deprive of, despoil (in cl. chiefly of the misappropriation of trust funds, Field, Notes, 33; cf. MM, s.v.): absol., Mk 10!%, 1 Co 68; c. acc. pers.,1 Co 75. Mid., endure deprivation: 1 Co 6’ (WM, § 38, 3; but v. Bl., § 54,5; M, Pr., 162); pass., dreorepnuevor, bereft of : 1 Ti 6°.t dto-aToAy, -75, 7) (<< drooreAAw), [in LXX: De 227, rr Ki 434 916, Ps 77 (78)4%, Ec 88, Ca 413 (for mouy and its cognates), 1 Es 951) 54, Je 39 (32)6, Ba 275, 1 Mac 218 11 Mac 3?*.] 1. In cl., a sending away (MM, s.v.), as, an expedition (Hdt.). 2. In LXX (a) discharge, dis- | missal (Kc 88); (b) a gift (111 Ki 916, 1 Mac 238). 3. In NT, the office of an Apostle of Christ, apostleship: Ac 15, Ro 15, 1 Co 92, Ga 28 (Cremer, 530).t amdatoNos, -ov, 6 (<< drooreAAw), [in LXX: m1 Ki 146A (n*>y7) mel MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 55 1. a fleet, an expedition (Dem.). 2. a messenger, one sent on a mission (Hdt., LXX, l.c., and z.; v. M, Pr., 37f.; MM, s.v.; M, 7h., i, 27 and reff.): Jo 1316, 11 Co 88, Phi 27°, 3. In NT, an Apostle of Christ (a) with special ref. to the Twelve: Mt 10?, Mk 314, Lk 114°, Eph 35, Re 18”, al., equality with whom is claimed by St. Paul, Ga 1) Uf, 1 Ti 27, al.; (0) in a wider sense of prominent Christian teachers, as Barnabas, Ac 1414, apparently also Silvanus and Timothy, 1 Th 2°, and perhaps Andronicus and Junias (Junia?), Ro 167 (v. JCC, in 1.); of false teachers, claiming apostleship: 11 Co 11518, Re 2?. (On the different uses of the term in NT, v. Lft., Gal., 92-101; Cremer, 530; DB, i, 126; DCG, i, 105; Enc. Br., ii, 196 ff.) * dmootopatitw ( (My) *;] @ little lamb, a lamb: Jo 21, Re o,.t t+ dpotpidw, -@ (<< dporpov), [in LXX: De 221, al. (wan), Is 775 (ay) ;] later form of apow, to plough (MM, s.v.): Lk 17’, 1 Co 9'.+ dipotpov, -ov, TO (<< dpow, to plough), [in LXX chiefly for AN ;] a plough: Lk 9%.+ dpwayy, -7s, 9 (<< dprafw), [in LXX (as also dprayya) for br, etc.;] pillage, plundering, robbery: Mt 2375, Lk 11°, He 10%4.t *t Gpmaypds, od, 6 (, 6, indecl. (Heb. 4ON), Asaph, an obvious error for ‘Aca, found in the best texts, and adopted by LTTr. and WH, R, mg.: Mt 1% 8,+ a-oBeotos, -ov (:] to be weak, feeble: Ac 2035, Ro 8%, 11 Co 11?! 121° 1349; ¢. dat., wiore: (Cremer, 527), Ro 419 141; same implied, Ro 14% 21, 1 Co 81412, 11 Co 1129; éis, 11 Co 13%. Specif., of bodily debility, to be sick: Mt 25°6 39, Lk 440, Jo 446 §3 7, 18 J11°3,6, Ac 987, Ph) 22627 17 Ti 429 Ja 514; of dcOevovrres, the sick : Mt 108 (MM, s.v.), Mk 656, Lk 92, Ac 19!2.+ * dobévnpa, -tos, TO (<< dodevys), an infirmity (MM, s.v.): Ro 151.+ daQerys, -és (<< a- neg., cOévos, strength), [in LXX for 3x, etc. 5] without strength, weak, feeble: 1 Co 127 419 1922) tr Co 10!, Ga 4°, 1 Th 5'4, He 718, 1 Pe 37. Rhetorically, 76 4. 7. Gcod, God’s action of apparent weakness: 1 Co 1°; of bodily debility, sick, sickly : Mt 25%9 (Rec.) 4244, Lik 9? (Rec.) 10°, Ac 4° 51516 In moral and spiritual sense (MM, s.v.; Cremer, 526), Mt 2641, Mk 14°8, Ro 5%, 1 Co 87 9 10 Se IU *Acta, -as, 7, Asia, the Roman province: Ac 2°69 166 19!) 10, 22, 26 (Ml Pr) 73), 1b. 47 20526 18 Bier 24te 272) ho lG2) 1) Col6t at Code Ee 1S Pett Rest *Aotaves, -7, -ov, Asian, of Asta, Asiatic; as subst., 6 (oi) “A.: Ac 204.t+ *tAodpxys, -ov, 6, an Asiarch, one of ten officers elected by the various cities in the province of Asia whose duty it was to celebrate at their own charges the public games and festivals: Ac 19%! (Strab., Inser.; DB, s.v.).t * doitla, -as, 7 (<< doutos), fasting, abstinence from food: Ac 2771,+ SYN.: vyorteia (MM, ut infr.). * Goutos, -ov (<< d- neg., airos), fasting, without eating (cf. MM, s.v.): PNY SIN Gp ** doxéw, -O, [in LXX: 1 Mac 154*;] 1. to adorn (poét.). 2. to practise, exercise (Hdt., Xen.). 3. to endeavour (Xen., al.): c. inf., Ac 2416.+ doxés, -od, 6, [in LXX for MAM, IN3, 533;] a leather bottle, wine- skin: Mt 9!7, Mk 222, Lik 53% 38+ ** dopeévws, adv. (<< jdouar, to be glad), [in LXX: mu Mac 4}? 1083, tt Mac 315 521*;] gladly: Ac 211".+ &-cogos, -ov, [in LXX: Pr 9N?2A*;] wnwise, foolish : Eph 5'5.+ déondétopat, depon., [in LXX: Ex 187, Jg 1815 (oib>wh byw’), Es 5, I Mac 7°, al.;] to welcome, greet, salute: c. acc. pers., Mt 547, Mk 945, Ac 21’, al.; id. seq. év puAnuari, Ro 1616, 1 Co 16°, 11 Co 1312, 1 Th 5°6, I Pe 5!4; +. éxxAnoiav (Deiss., BS, 257), Ac 1872; as term. tech. for conveying greetings at the end of a letter (MM, s.v.), used by an amanuensis (Milligan, N7'D, 23), Ro 1622 (on the aoristic pres., here MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 65 and elsewhere, v. M, Pr., 119; Bl., § 56,4); xatyvrnoav . . . doracd- pevor (on this constr., v. Bl., §58, 4; M, Pr., 182, 238), Ac 2518 (cf. dr-acmdlopar).t * dotmacpds, -00, 6 (<< doraloua), a salutation (so always in RY), greeting: oral, Mt 237, Mk 1238 Lk 12% 41,44 1148 2046; written, 1 Co 1671, Col 418, 1 Th 317.+ **+ G-omdos, -ov (<< d- neg., ezidos), [in Sm.: Jb 15° (LXX, xaapds)*;] spotless, unstained: 1 Pe 119; metaph., 1 Ti 614, Ja 1°”, 1 Pe 31 (for exx., v. MM, s.v.).t SYN.: auiavtos, duwpos. dons, -idos, 7, [in LXX for 7M, etc. ;] an asp: Ro 31%.t GotrovSos, -ov (<< orovdy, a Libation); 1. without truce (Thuc.). 2. admitting of no truce, implacable (Dem., al.): 11 Ti 3°.+ *t doodptoy, -ov, ro (dim. of Lat. as), an assarion, a farthing, one- tenth of a drachma: Mt 10°, Lk 12° (MM, s.v.; DB, iii, 428; DCG, ii, 200).+ *dooov (Rec., after Vg., "Accov), adv. (compar. of ayy, near), nearer: Ac 2718 (RV, close in shore; v. Bl., § 11, 3; 44, 3; poets, Ion. and late prose).t “Agoos, -ov (also ’Acads, -ov), 7, Assos, a city on the EK. coast of Asia Minor: Ac 20!% 14 (v.8. doaov).t ¥*+ dotatéw, -& (<< doraros, wnstable), [in Aq.: Is 587 (LXX, dore- yos)*;] to be unsettled, be homeless, lead a vagabond life (Cremer, 738 MM, s.v.): 1 Co 44.+ dotetos, -ov (u%), Si 16°*;] childless: Lk 202% 29,+ ** arevilw (<< drevys, strained, intent ; < reivw), [in LXX: 1 Es 638, ur Mac 27°*;} to look fixedly, gaze (MM, s.v.): c. dat. pers., gaze wpon: Lk 47° 2256 Ac 32 104 14° 231; seq. eis, c. acc. pers., Ac 34 6! 139; metaph., Ac 1! 755 116, 11 Co 3% 13.+ ** Grep, prep., [in LXX: m Mac 12'°*;] in cl. most freq. in poets; without, apart from: c. gen., Lk 22° %° (for exx. from z., v. MM, s.v.).t atipdtw (<< dripos), [in LXX for 713, mp, etc. ;] to dishonour, imsult: Mk 12%, TTr., mg., WH, Lk 20", Jo 8*, Ro 25, Ja 2°; pass.: Ac 54!, Ro 14 (cf dripdw).t * d-tindw, -@ (<< tyuy), to dishonour, despise: c. acc. pers., Mk 124, LTr., txt. (cf. dtiuagw).t Gripia, -as, % (dros), [in LXX for mpdp, Td, ete. ;] dishonour, disgrace: 1 Co 1114, 11 Co 68; eis a., Ro 971, 11 Ti 279; & a., 1 Co 1548; kat a., 11 Co 1171; rd6y aripias, base passions, Ro 126,+ &risos, -ov (;] 1. prop., to lodge in a courtyard. 2. to lodge in the open. 3. to pass the night, lodge (LXX; MM, s.v.): Mt 21!", Lk 2187.+ adds, -03, 6 (<< dw, to blow), [in LXX chiefly for 5-5m;] a pipe: 1 Co 147.t adédvw (and the earlier form atéw, Eph 27!, Col 21°; MM, bar [in LXX chiefly for m"H;] 1. trans., to make to grow: 1 Co 3%&7, 11 Co 91°, Pass., to grow, increase, become greater: Mt 1332, Mk 48, 1 Co 10, Col 16; rH emuyvice 7. Oeot, Col 11°; eis cwrypiav, I Pe 2°. 2. In later Gk. (but nowhere in LXX), intrans., to grow, increase: of plants, Mt 678, Lk 1277 131°; of infants, Lk 18° 2°; of a multitude, Ac 7!7; of the increase of the Gospel: 6 Adyos nvgave, Ac 67 1274 1929; of Christ as a leader, Jo 3%°; of Christian character: «is Xpicrdv, Eph 41°; eis vadv, Eph 271; ev xapirr, 11 Pe 318; tiv avéyow 7. Oeod, Col 29 (cf. cuv-, irep-avédvw).t ** adénous, -ews, 1) (< av&w), [in LXX: m Mac Oil increase, growth: Eph 41%, Col 2}°.+ algw, V.S. avéavw. aupa, a breeze: +. rveovon (sc. avpa), Ac 2749.+ avpioy, ady., {in LXX for 7M;] to-morrow: Mt 6°, Lk 12%8, Ac 232 95%, 1 Co 15%, Lk 13328, Ja 418; 4 ad. (sc. juepa, MM, s.v.), MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 69 Mt 6%4, Ac 4°; émi rv av., Lk 10°, Ac 4°; ro (WH om.) ris ai., Ja 414+ ** adotnpds, -a, -dv (<< atu, to dry up), [in LXX: 1m Mac 1439*;] prop., stringent, harsh to the taste. Metaph., in Inser., of a rough country; of disposition and manners, strict, severe (as in 7., of an inspector; MM, s.v.): Lk 197) 22.+ S¥YN.: oxAnpés (Tr., § xiv). j *aitdpkera, -as, 7 (<( avrdpxys, q.v.), (a) sufficiency (MM, s.v.): in subjective sense (vy. Milligan, NTD, 57), 11 Co 98; (6) contentment : ce adtdpkys, -es (<< airds, dpxéw), [in LXX: Pr 241 (30%) (ph), Si 5! 1174 34 (31)?8 40!8, 1v Mac 9°*;] as in cl., in philosophical sense, self- sufficient, independent ; subjectively, contented: Phi 41! (in non-lit. 7., the word means simply enough, sufficient ; MM, s.v.).t *t adto-Kkatd-Kpitos, -ov (<< ards, xaraxpivw), self-condemned: Tit 34 (Eccl., Cremer, 377; MM, s.v.).t+ aitépatos, -ov, and -y, -ov (etym. doubtful; v. Boisacq, Prellwitz, s.v.), [in LXX, Le 25°11, rv Ki 192° (BD), Jos 6°, Jb 2474, Wi 17 * 5] 1. of persons, acting of one’s own will. 2. Of inanimate things and natural agencies, of ttself, of its own accord: yn, Mk 478 (MM, s.v.); mvAn, Ac 121°.+ * adtémrys, -ov, 6, an eye-witness: Lk 12.+ aités, -7, -d, determinative pron., in late Gk. much more freq. than in cl. (WM, 178 f.; Jannaris, HGG, § 1399). 1. Emphatic (so always in nom. exc. when preceded by the art., v. infr., iii); (1) self (ise), expressing opposition, distinction, exclusion, etc., av. exxvOnoerat, Lik 537; av. éywdoxev, Jo 2°; ad. ipets, Jo 328; Kai ad. eye, Ro 15!4; av. “Iycois, Jo 274; ad. wat of per aitrod, Mk 27; Speis ai., Mk 631; esp. (as freq. in cl.) a’. 6, Mt 34, Mk 617, Jo 1627, I Th 3", al.; in late Gk., sometimes weakened, év airy +. dpa, in that hour, Lk 107! (M, Pr., 91; MM, s.v.); (2) emphatic, he, she, tt (M, Pr., 86; Bl., § 48, 1, 2, 7), Mt 12! 125° Lk 6%, al.; pointing to some one as master (cl.), Mt 824, Mk 4°8, al.; av., xai av. = odros, 6 de (Bl., § 48, 1), Mt 147, Mk 1415 44, Lk 122 978 al. 2. In oblique cases (cl.), for the simple pron. of 3rd pers., he, she, it, Mt 7° 10'2 2644, al. ; with ptep. in gen. absol., Mt 9!8, Mk 13}, al. (for irreg. constructions, v. Bl., § 74, 5); pleonastically after the relative (cf. Heb. % WY ; WM, 184 ff.; Bl. § 50,4; MM, s.v.), Mk 725, Re 3° 72, al.; in constr. ad sensum, without proper subject expressly indicated, Mt 47°, Ac 85, 11 Co 238, al.; gen. adrod = éxeivov, Ro 11, 1 Th 2}, Tit 35, He 24. 3. 6, 7, TO ai., the same: He 1!” 138; 76 ai., rovetv, Mt 5*® 47, al.; ppoveiv, Ro 1216 15°, Phi 2?, al.; 7a ad., Ac 1527, Ro 2}, al.; xara 76 (ra) ad. (MM, s.v.), Ac 141, Lk 67, al.; éxi ro av., together (MM, s.v.), Mt 2234, Ac 115, al.; €v x. ro ad., I Co 11° 12"; ec, dat. (cl.), 1 Co 11°; with a noun, Aoyos, Mk 14°°; peérpos, Phi 19°; rvedua, 1 Co 124. adtod, adv., prop. neut. gen. of ards, [in LXX for MB, m73;] 70 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT there: Mt 2636, Mk 633, WH, mg., Lk 927, Ac 1534, WH, mg., R, mg., 18)? 214+ aitod, -fs, -00, =éavrod (q.v.), Mt 64, Lk 121’, al. (MM, s.v.). ** adtépwpos, -ov (<< airs, dup, a thief), [in Sm.: Jb 341*;] prop. with ref. to theft, then generally, in the very act: as freq., neut. dat. after éri, Jo 8* (Rec., éravrodwpw).t *adté-xeip, -pos, 6, 7 (a, ma>na;] 1. prop. abstract, sovereignty, royal power, dominion: Lk 13 2229, Jo 1836, Ac 16, He 18, 1 Co 15%; AaBeiv B., Lk 19!%15, Re 1712; dodvar tiv B., ib.17; eyew B., ib.18; epyerbar ev rt. (cis tiv) B., Mt 16°, Lk 2347; B. 7. Oe00, Re 121°, 2. By meton., concrete (MM, Ezp., x), (a) a kingdom, the territory or people over whom the king rules (Es 53, al.): Mt 48 12% 26 947, Mk 324 628, Lk 4°, He 1153, al.; (0) the royal majesty (cf. our phrase His Majesty), the king himself (r. orépya rps B., Iv Kill’). 3. In LXX (Wi 6°, To 13}, al.), Targ. and NT, of the Messianic rule and kingdom, 4 B. r. 6cod, 7. oipavav (Heb. maw nian , Aram, N°3Ww"t xminbn ; v. Dalman, Words, 91-147; Cremer, 132, 658), the kingdom of God (on the equivalence of the two phrases, v. Dalman, op. cit., 93, 218f.); 7. Geot, Mt 6° 1278, al.; 7. ovpavav, Mt 3? 417, al.; 7. Xpicrod (NMWIT mind, Targ. Jon. on Is 531°), Eph oO; T. kuptov, 11 Pe pe: Re 11}5; T. Aaveid, Mk 112°; absol., 7 B., Mt 4°8, Ja 2°, al. The kingdom is regarded as present: Mt 1122, Lk 1721, Ro 14’, al.; as that which is to be consummated in the future, Mt 6°, Mk 9!, Jo 3°, 11 Pe 1", al. Noteworthy phrases are: Cynteiv thv B., Mt 639; d€xerPar, Mk 10%; xAnpovopetv, Mt 25%; ddevar, Lk 1232; raparauBavev, He 1278; atrav (rowvtwv) éeoriv 7 B., Mt 5% 10 1914 Mk 104, Lk 18!6; dia ri B., Mt 19%; evexer ris B., Lk 1879; evayyeAiLecOar, xnpiooew, SiayyéAAew tiv B., Lk 44 97%; nyyxe 7» B., Mt 32, Mk 1); Krels ris B., Mt 161%; Krclew tiv B., Mt 2314; vioi ris B., Mt 81% 13% (cf. Cremer, 132, 658). Basidevoy, -ov, 76 (<< Bacidews, q.v.), [in LXX for 53> (Na 25, Da 6'8*), maby (11 Ki 3! 148, wv Ki 15!9*), ete.;] 1. a capital city. 2. Freq. in pl., ra B., a palace: Lk 7?°.+ Bacidevos, -ov (also -a, -ov; < Bacrdre’s), [in LXX: Hx 19°, De 3 (maby), Ex 2322, Wi 18, ut Mac 3°, 1v Mac 38*;] royal: I Pe 29(LXX) (vy. Hort, in 1.).+ Baowdeds, -éws, 6, [in LXX chiefly for Joa 3]. @ king: Mé 16 2}: used by courtesy of Herod the Tetrarch, Mt 14°; of the Roman Emperor, as freq. in xowy (Deiss., LAH, p. 367), 1 Pe 2117; of the Christ, in the phrase 6 B. 7. “Iovdatwy, Mt 2?, al.; rod IopayA, Mk 15%, Jo 15° 1213; of God, Mt 5%, 1 Ti 117, Re 15%; B. Baotréwv, Re 1714 1916; B. +r. Bacievovrwv, 1 Ti 6° (on the associations of the word to Jewish Hellenists, v. Cl. Rev., i, 7).t 78 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Bacithedw, (<< Bacwrevs), [in LXX for Jr, its parts and deri- vatives, exc. tv Ki 15° (aw) ;] to be king, to reign, rule: 1 Ti 615; c. gen. (cl.), Mt 222; seq. ér/, c. acc. (= Heb. by yon; BL, § 36, 8), Lk 133 191427, Ro 514; émi 7. ys, on earth, Re 5; of God, Re 11) 17 196; of Christ, Lk 133, 1 Co 15°, Re 111°; of Christians, Re 5!° 204 (con- stative aor., M, Pr., 130), ib.6 225. Metaph., Christians, Ro 51”, 1 Co 48; @dvaros, Ro 5!417; duapria, Ro 571 6%. Ingressive aor. (M, Pr., 109), to begin to reign: 1 Co 48, Re 1117 19° (Cremer, 137).t+ Baotdtkds, -7, -ov (<< Bacrdevs), [in LXX for 99 and its cog- nates ;] royal, belonging to a king: xwpa, Ac 127°; eons, Ac 1271; vopos B., a supreme law, ‘a law which governs other laws and so has a specially regal character’’ (Hort), or because made by a king (LAE, p. 367%), Ja 28; rus, one in the service of a king, a courtier, Jo 44% 4° (WH, mg., Bacrickos).t + BaciNtokos, -ov, 6 (dim. of BactArcds), [in LXX a basilisk: Ps 90 (91)}3 (jmp), Is 59° (MYDN)*;] prop., a petty king: Jo 444, WH, mg. (v.s. BaotAkds).t Bacittooa, -ns, 7 (in Attic, Baca, Barris), [in LXX chiefly for mD>0;] a queen: Mt 12*, Lk 1131, Ac 827, Re 187.+ Bdors, -ews, 7 (<< Patvw), [in LXX chiefly for JJN;] 1. a step (Aisch., al.). 2. Hence, a foot (Plat.; Wi 1318): Ac 37.t Backaivw, [in LXX: De 28% 5° (yy4), Si 14%8*;] 1. to slander (Dem.). 2. to blight by the evil eye, to fascinate, bewitch : Ga 31.t Baordfw, [in LXX: Jg 16° (mms), Ru 216 1 Ki 235, 1v Ki 18'4 and Jb 213 (Nis), Si 625, Da TH Bel***;] 1. to take wp with the hands, to lift: ous, Jo 10*4. 2. to bear, to carry, as a burden, and metaph., to endure: Mt 3! 2012, Mk 1418, Lk 714 107 1127 1427 9910 Jo 1613 191 Ae '3? 91 151° A125) Ro 1118 151) Gatto. te Re 2a CS.) in late writers (MM, Hop., ii, iii, x), (a) to take away: Mt 8" (Is 534, Heb.) ; (0) to carry off, steal: Jo 12° 201%.t Batos, -ov, 6, 7, [in LXX (always masc., as in Attic): Ex 3°, De 331° (M30), Jb 314° (MWNA)*;] a bramble-bush: Lk 644, Ac 73% 35; éri rod (rips) B., in the place concerning the bush: Mk 1276, Lk 20°7,+ t+ Bdatos -ov, 6 (Heb. m3), [in LXX (also Bald, Bados): 1 Es 722 * 5] bath, a Jewish liquid measure, = perpytys (q.v.), or about 83 gals.: Lk 165.+ Bdtpaxos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Ex 8, Ps 77 (78) 45 104 (105)%° (y379y), Wi 19!°*;] a frog: Re 16'%.t *+ Battadoyéw, -@ (Rec. Barrodr-, D, Bdrart- = Barrapi~w, prob. onomatop.; v. MM, s.v.; DCG, ii, 499», 790%); to stammer, repeat idly : Mt 67 (Cremer, 765).t t PSAuypa, -ros, TO ( 2127; +6 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 79 B. 7. épnpadceas (Da LXX 12", cf. 1 Mac 154; DB, i, 12f.; DCG, i, 6 f.), Mk 1344, Mt 245 (Cremer, 138).+ t BSeduKTds, 7, -dv (< BoeAvoow), [in LXX: Pr 174 (mayin), Si 41°, 11 Mac 1?”*;] abominable, detestable: Tit 11° (Cremer, 137).+ BSeXtoow ( Re 72:1 Bepvixy (elsewhere Bepevixn, Macedonian form of ®epevixy, cf. Veronica, Victoria), -ns, 7, Bernice, Berenice, dau. of Herod Agrippa I: Ac 251% 23 9630 + Bépoua, -as, 7, Berwa, a city of Macedonia: Ac 17} 13+ Bepotaios, -a, -ov, Berean: Ac 204.t Bedp, 6, indecl. (Heb. iva), Beor, father of Balaam: 11 Pe 215 (Rec. Boodp).t BnOaBapd, -as (Rec. -pa, indecl.; Heb. May mR, place of crossing ; -apaBa, R, mg.), Bethabara: Jo 175, Rec. (WH, R, ByGavia).t ByPavia, -as (also -va, indecl., Lk 19° and in B*, Mk 11), 9, (Heb. May MA, house of affliction, acc. to Jerome, or perh., house of dates, cf. Bethphage), Bethany; 1. a village fifteen furlongs from Jerusalem, the modern Hil Azeriyeh: Mt 21!” 26°, Mk 8” (WH, mg.) 111412 148, Tk 1929 2450 Jo 11418 121. 2. A place on EH. bank of Jordan: Jo 178 (R, mg., ByOaBapa, q.v.).t Bybeodd, 7, indecl. (deriv. uncertain, v. Westc. on Jo 5?, and DB, i, 279), Bethesda, a pool in Jerusalem: Jo 5’, Rec. (Byélaba, WH, ByOcaida, WH, mg.).t BynOta0d, 7, indecl. (perh. Aram. NAM MA, house of oltes) Bethzatha: Jo 5*, WH (Rec. ByOeoda, q.v.).t BnOdeep, #, indecl. (Heb. amd ma, house of bread), Bethlehem, a town 6 m. 8. of Jerusalem: Mt 21) % 6 8 16 [ik 9415 Jo 742+ BynOoadd (Rec. -caida), and -dav (Mt, Mk, ll. c.), 7, indecl. (Syr., house of fish), Bethsaida, a town on NE. shore of the Sea of Galilee: Lk 91°. It is generally supposed that a second B. on the W. shore is referred to in Mt 1121, Mk 6* 82, Lk 10!8, Jo 145 1271 (DB, i, 282 f.; but v. Swete on Mk 64°). 2. v.l. for BynOZaba, Bynbeoda, Jo 5?.+ ByPpayn (L, -y7), 7, indecl. (Aram. "38°MA, house of unripe figs ; Dalman, Gr., 191), Bethphage: Mt 211, Mk 11!, Lk 1929.+ Baipa, -r0s, 76 (< Baio), [in LXX: De 2° (7779), Ne 8* (5339), 1 Hs 942, Si 1989 459, 11 Mac 1376*;] 1. a step, stride, pace: Ac7>®, 2.4 raised place, a platform reached by steps, originally that in the Pnyx at Athens from which orations were made; freq. of the tribune or tribunal of a Roman magistrate or ruler: Mt 2719, Jo 1918, Ac 1221, 1812, 16,17 25% 1417; 8, rod Geod, Ro 141°; 7. Xpiorod, 11 Co 5!°,+ MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 81 **t Bypuddos, -ov, 6, 7, [in LXX: To 13!” (-vAXoy in Ex 287, omiz)* ;] beryl, a jewel of sea-green colour: Re 212°.+ Bia, -as, 4, [in LXX for FQ, etc. ;] strength, force, violence: Ac 576 2155 247 2741 + Bidlw (<< Bia), and depon. -onat, [in LXX for 778, IED, etc.;] to force, constrain, rare in act. (poét. and late prose), but found in cl. in pass., and so perh. PidLerar, suffereth violence, Mt 11", EV (but v. infr.), whether (a) in good sense, of disciples (Thayer, al.), or (6) in bad sense, of the enemies of the kingdom (Meyer, in 1.; Dalman, Words, 139 ff.; Cremer, 141 ff.). Mid., advanceth violently, Mt, 1.c. (Deiss., BS., 258; Banks, v. ref. in DCG, ii, 803 f.); seq. «is, to press violently, or force one’s way into, Lk 16!¢ (v. ICC, in 1., and in Mt, l.c.; cf. rapa- BicLopa: and v. MM, s.v.).t Biawos, -a, -ov (<( Bia), [in LXX for WIN, IY, AW, etc.;] violent: Ac 2?,+ *t Biaorys, -ov, 6 (<< Bidlw), late form of Bards; 1. strong, forceful. 2. violent (Philo): Mt 11? (see Biafw).t *t BiBdapiSiov, -ov, 7d (dim. of BuBAdpiov, dim. of BiBros), a little book: Re 10%* (WH, BiBriov, T?7 BiBrdgdprov)*°, Not hitherto found elsewhere.t BiBASdprov, -ov, 7d, V.S. BuBAapid.ov. BiBXtov, -ov, 7d (dim. of BiBAos, q.v.), [in LXX also in the alternat. form BvB-, chiefly for 9p} and the most freq. of the cognate forms;] 1. a paper, letter, written document: B. aroataciov, bill of diworce, Mt 197, Mk 10*. 2. a book, a roll: Lk 41729 Jo 2039 2125 Ga 3° n Ti 44, He 9° 107;. Re 1" 59 614 10% 2012 237-9; B. +r. wigs. Re 138 178 2012 2127.+ BiBdos, -ov, 7 (variant form of BvBAos, the Egyptian papyrus, paper made from its fibrous coat), [in LXX for 1p9, the form Bvp- being sometimes used;] a book, a roll, used much less freq. than BiBrtov, and with a “connotation of sacredness and veneration”’ (MM, Eap., x), Mt 1’, Mk 1276, Lk 34 204? Ac 17° 742 1919; 8. +. Lwijs, Ph! 4°, Re 35 2015,+ BiBpdoxw, post. and late prose, [in LXX for 55N;] to eat: Jo * 613.4 Bubuvia, aa Bithynia, a province in Asia Minor: Ac 16’, 1 Pe 1!.+ Bios, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for O°3;] 1. period or course of life, life: Lk 84,1 Ti 2?, 1 Ti 24, 1Jo 216, 2. living, livelihood, means (in Pr 3114 for ond; v. DCG, ii, 39°): Mk 12, Lk 843 151230 914, I Jo 317.+ Syy.: fwy, is life intensive, “vita qua vivimus,” the vital principle; Bios, life extensive, “ vita quam vivimus,” (1) the period of life, (2) the means by which it is sustained. Hence, in cl., ¢., being confined to the physical life common to men and animals, is the 6 82 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT inferior word (cf. zoology, biography). In NT, fwy is elevated into the ethical and spiritual sphere (cf. Tr., Syn., § xxvii). Bidw, -@ (<< Bios), [in LXX: Pr 7? 9% (mn), Jb 29'8, Wi 44 8}, 12°3, Si 40°8, rv Mac 57? 1718* 5] to spend life, to live: +. xpdvov Bidcat (cl., more freq. 2 uor., -va), 1 Pe 4? (cf. Jb, l.c.).t SYN.: Caw (q.v.). ‘i ¥*t Biwots, -ews, 7 (<< Bidw), [in LXX: Si prol.2*;] manner of life: ce 264.+ * Buwtixds, -7, -ov (<< Bios), pertaining to life, hence, worldly (Field, Notes, 171): Lk 21°, 1 Co 6% 4.+ - BraBepds, -d, -ov (<< BAawrw), [in LXX: Pr 107*;] hurtful: jel ACE Bd\drrw, [in LXX: Pr 25°, To 122, Wi 108 18?, m Mac 12”, Iv Mac 97*;] to hurt, injure: c. acc., Mk 1608], Lk 435.+ Br\actdvw, [in LXX for max, etc.;] 1. to sprout: Mt 13%, Mk 47, He 94, 2. In late Gk., causal, to make to grow, produce: c. acc., Ja 518,+ B\dotos, -ov, 6, Blastuws, chamberlain of Agrippa: Ac 12?°.+ Braopynpéw, -& (<< BAdodnpos), [in LXX: 1v Ki 194 (M5 hi.) ib. 7? (F712 pi.), Is 52° (pN3 hith.), Da LXX 39 99) (nbw x), To 138, Da TH Bel®, 11 Mac,*;] 1. to speak lightly or profanely of sacred things (in cl., opp. of edidypéw), esp. to speak impiously of God, to blaspheme, speak blasphemously : absol., Mt 9° 26°, Mk 27, Jo 10°, Ac 2611, 1 Ti 17°, 1 Pe 2!2; +. dev, Ac 1927, Re 16121; 76 Gvoua +. Geod, Re 13° 16°; ddfas, Ju’, 1 Pe 21; cis 7d rvedua ro adyov, Mk 37°, Lk 121°, 2. to revile, rail at, slander: absol., Lk 22°, Ac 184 186 1 Pe 44; c. ace., Mt 2799, Mk 328 1529, Lk 2399, Tit 3?, Ja 27, Ju}°, Pass.: Ro 274 38 1416 1 Co 10°9, 1 Ti 61, Tit 2°, 1: Pe 2? (Cremer, 570).t+ Pracdypia, -as, 7 (<< BAdopypos), [in LXX: Ez 35” (A¥NQ), Da TH 329 (96) (mbyy), To 118, 1 Mac 28, 11 Mac 84 10% 1524*;] (a) railing, slander: Mt 123! 1519, Mk 328 722, Kph 431, Col 38, 1 Ti 64, Ju, Re 2°; (b) spec., impious speech against God, blasphemy: Mt 26%, Mk 14%, Lk 521, Jo 1038, Re 13°; dvoua BrAacdynpias, Re 13! 17%; c. gen. obj., Mt 1231; apos 7. Oedv, Re 13° (Cremer, 570; DB, i, 305; DCG, ii, 423).+ Brdognpos, -ov (<< Bdrac-, of uncertain deriv., v. Thayer, Boisacq; + yy, speech), [in LXX: Is 663 (8 FIR), Wi 1%, Si 3s, 11 Mac 928 104 36* 5] (a) evil-speaking, slanderous, blasphemous: Ac 61}, u Ti 32,1 Pe 21 (cf. Ju%); (0) as subst. a blasphemer: 1 Ti 1% (Cremer, 570).t * Bdéupa, -ros, To (<< Brew), a look, a glance: BAr€upate Kai axoy, 11 Pe 28, sight and hearing, a sense not found for £. in Gk. lit., but perh. recognized in the vernacular (ICC, in 1.)t Bdérw, [in LXX chiefly for AN5, also for 3B, etc.;] 1. of bodily sight; (a) to see, have sight (opp. to tupAds evar): Mt 127, Jo 97, Ac 9°, Ro 118, Re 338, al.; (6) to perceive, look (at), see: absol., MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 83 Ac 19; c. acc., Mt 78, Mk 5*!, Lk 641, Jo 129, al.; dpaya, Ac 129; yevaixa, Mt 578; BiBréiov, Re 54; +. Brerdueva, 11 Co 418. 2. Metaph., of mental vision ; (a) to see, perceive, discern: absol., Mt 1313, Lk 819; dv’ éoorrpov, 1 Co 13"; c. acc., He 2° 1075; seq. dm, He 3!°, Ja 222; (b) to consider, look to, take heed: absol., Mk 137% 33; ¢, acc., 1Co 126 al. ; seq. mds, c. indic., Lk 818, 1 Co 31°, Eph 515; seq. ri, c. indic., Mk 474; seq. eis mpdcwmov, of partiality, Mt 221°, Mk 12'4. Colloq. (for ex. from z., v. Deiss., LAH, 122; M, Pr., 107; MM, Hap.,x; Milligan, NTD, 50), B. éavrov: Mk 13°; seq. iva py, 1 Jo8; B. aro, Mk 815 1238; seq. wy (cl. dpav pum), c. fut. indic., Col 28, He 3!; id. c. aor. subj., Mt 24*, Mk 13°. 3. OF situation and direction (Lat. specto), to look, face (towards), places, etc. (seq. pds, Xen, Hell., vii, 1, 17; Ez 40?) 24): seq. xara, c. acc., Ac 27!” (cf. dva-, dzo-, dia-, éu-, émi-, mep-, mpo-BAérw), v. DCG, i, 446; ii, 596. *t Bdyrtéos, -o, -ov (gerundive of BaAAw), (that which) one must put: Lk 5°8,+ Bod£, v.s. Bods. Boavypyés, indecl. (on the derivation, v. Dalman, Gr., 144; Words, 42; Swete, Mk., l.c.; DCG, i, 216), Boanerges: Mk 3'7.+ Bodw, -& (< Boy), [in LXX chiefly for prt, py¥ , NI ;] 1. absol., to cry, call owt: Mt 3%, 2746, Mk 1° 1534, Lk 34 938 1838 Jo 123, Ac 87 17° 254, Ga 427, 2. C. dat., to call on for help (Heb. by pyr, Ho 744, al.), Lk 187.+ SYN.: xaréw, to call, invite, summon; xpdfw, to cry, harshly or inarticulately, as animals; xpavyd{w, intensive of xpd{w. Bodw ex- presses emotion, whether joy, fear, ete. Boés, 6, V.S. Boos. Box, js, 7, [in LXX for Apyt, etc.;] a cry: Ja 54+ BorPea, -as, 7 (v.s. Bonféw), [in LXX for Wy, etc.;] help: He 416; pl., helps, “ frapping,” a technical nautical term (MM, Ezp., x; DB, ext., 367): Ac 2737.+ Bondéw, -& (<< Bon + Oéw, to run), [in LXX chiefly for s1y;] to come to aid, to help, succour : absol., Ac 217°; c. dat., Mt 1575, Mk 922, 24 Ac 16°, 11 Co 62 @XX), He 218, Re 1216+ Bon Qs, -dv (v.8. Bonéw), [in LXX chiefly for Wy ;] 1. (poét. -dos), hasting to the war-cry (Hom.). 2. helping, auxiliary ; as subst. (Hdt.), a helper: He 136 @XX),+ BdOuvos, -ov, 6 (= Bd6pos, more freq. in cl.), [in LXX chiefly for Mmnp;] a pit: Mt 12! 154, Lk 6% (cf. DB, iii, 885; DCG, ii, 367).+ Body, -7s, 7 (<< BaAAw), [in LXX: Ge 2116 (AMM), 11 Mac 53, m1 Mac 576* ;] a throw ; Gov B. (Thuc., v, 65, 2), a stone’s throw : Lk 2241,+ *t BodiLw (<< Bodis, in sense of sownding-lead), to heave the lead, take soundings: Ac 278,t t+ Bodis, ios, 7 (<< Badrw), [in LXX for pry, M3, etc.;] a dart, javelin: He 127°, Rec. (LXX).+ 84 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Bods and Boes (RV, Bodé, Rec. Boog), 6, indecl. (Heb. 193), Boaz (Ru 21): Mt 15, Lk 382.+ BépBopos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Je 45 (38)® (ra°19)* 5] mud, filth: 1 Pe 922 + Boppas, -a (Attic contr. of Bopéas, the North wind personified), [in LXX for 7ipy;] 1. Boreas, the North wind. 2. the north: Lk 1379, Re 2113.+ Bécxw, [in LXX for My4;] prop., of a herdsman, to feed: Mt 8°%, Mk 514, Lk 84 1515; metaph., of Christian pastoral care, Jo 21) 17, Pass., of cattle, to feed, graze: Mt 8°°, Mk 5", Lk 8%2.+ SYN.: rowatvew, to tend, shepherd, a wider term, including over- sight as well as feeding (v. Tr., Syn., § xxv). Boodp, V. Bewp. Bordvn, -ns, 7 (<< Booxw), [in LXX for ayy, xwy, Vxn;] 1. grass, fodder. 2. green herb: He 67.+ SYN.: Adxavov, a garden herb, a vegetable. Bérpus, -vos, 6, [in LXX for bdwx;] a cluster of grapes: Re 1418 (cf. crapvdAy).t Boudeutys, -08, 6 (<< Bovredw), [in LXX: Jb 3% 1217 (pyr) * 5] a councillor, a senator; of a member of the Sanhedrin: Mk 1543, Lk 235° + Boudkedw (< Bovdy), [in LXX chiefly for p3r;] to take counsel, deliberate, resolve. In mid., 1. to take counsel with oneself, consider : seq. et, Lk 141, 2. to determine with oneself, resolve: c. inf., Ac 5% 27°; c.acc., 11 Co 1"; seq. va, Jo 115% 12)° (cf. rapa-, cvp-).t Boudy, -7s, 7 (<< BovAoua), [in LXX freq. for M¥Y;] cownsel, purpose (in cl., esp. of the gods): Lk 23°, Ac 48 588 19! 2712, 42; pl., 1 Co 4°; of the Divine purpose, He 617; +. BovAry 1. OeAjnpatos avrov, Eph 1"; B. 7. @eod, Lk 79°, Ac 275 1336 20?7.+ BovAnpa, -ros, TO (<< BovAopa), [in LXX: Pr 9° (my), 1 Mac 15°, 1v Mac 8!8*;] purpose, will: Ac 2743, Ro 919, 1 Pe 43.+ SYN.: OeAnpa. Botdopwor, [in LXX for pdn, MAN, pyr, etc. ;] to will, wish, desire, purpose, be minded, implying more strongly than 6€dw (q.v.), the deliberate exercise of volition (v. Hort on Ja 118): c. inf. (M, Pr., 205; Bl., § 69, 4), Mk 1515 Ac 52533 194 1587 1720 1815.27 1980 9930 9328 9743 9818 11 Co 1) 1 Ti 6°, He 6", m Jo!2, m1 Jo”, Ju5; ec. ace., 1 Co 1”; c. acc. et inf., Phl 1!?, 1 Ti 28 514, Tit 38, 11 Pe 3°; of the will making choice between alternatives, Mt 119 1127, Lk 102, Ac 252°, 1 Co 121! Ja 34 44; ci BovAa (cl., a courteous phrase = Oédets, collog.; Bl., § 21, 8; LS, s.v.), Lk 224; c. subje., adding force to a question of delibera- tion (Bl., § 64, 6), Jo 18*°; Bovdndes, of set purpose (v. Hort, in 1.), Ja 118; impf., _Bovrdcpuny (= el. Bovdo‘unv av; Bl., § 63,5; Lft., Phm.}8), Ac 2522, Phm 3 (y. also Cremer, 143).t MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 85 Bouvés, -od, 6 (a Cyrenaic word, Hat., iv, 199), [in LXX chiefly for Myaa;] a hill: Lk 35 GX) 2330 ¢ Boas, Bods, 6, 4, [in LXX chiefly for 97} ;] anoz,acow: Lk 13 14519" Jo 214) 15 5 Co 9° C24) 5 Ti St * BpaBeiov, -ov, rd (<< BpaBers, an umpire), a prize in the games: 1 Co 9*4; metaph., of the Christian’s reward, Phl 3'4.t ** BoaBevw (<< BpaBevs, an umpire), [in LXX: Wi 10” *;] (a) prop., to act as wmpire; hence, (b) generally, to arbitrate, decide (Isocr., Dem.; Lft., Col., lc.; MM, s.v.): Col 34%; (c) in some late writers, to direct, rule, control (so in Col., l.c., acc. to Thayer, s.v., Meyer, in 1.), (cf. xara-BpaBevw).t Bpasivw (<< Bpadvs), [in LXX: Ge 43! (AMM hith.), De 7”, Is 4613 ("MN pi.), Si 32 (35)!8*;] 1. trans., to retard (Soph., Is, l.c.). 2. More freq. intrans., to be slow, to tarry: 1 Ti 31°, 11 Pe 39.t *t Bpadumdodw, -& (<< Bpadis, wAois), to sail slowly: Ac 277.+ * Bpabdus, -eta, -v, slow: eis TO AaARou, Ja 1°; metaph., of the understanding: £. rt. xapdia, assoc. with avonros, Lk 24*°.t * Bpaduris, -jros, 7, slowness: 11 Pe 3°.t Bpaxiwv, -ovos, 6, [in LXX, B. Kupiov, freq. for MYM yiny;] the arm; as in OT, B. Kvpiov, metaph., for the Divine power: Lk 1°, Jo 1238(LXX), Ac 1317.¢ Bpaxds, -eta, -v, [in LXX chiefly for mym;] short; (a) of time; short, little: Bpaxv, Ac 5°4; pera B., Lk 22°°; B. 11, a short time, He 279, RV, mg.; () of distance: Ac 2778; (c) of quantity or value, little, few: Jo 6’, He 2%°, RY, txt.; pl., da Bpaxéwy, in few words, He 13?2,+ ** Boépos, -ovs, 7d, [in LXX: Si 19%, 1 Mac 1*, m Mac 61°, 11 Mac 549, 1v Mac 4%°*;] 1. an unborn child: Lk 14444, 2. a new- born child, a babe: Lk 2!%16 1815 Ac 719 1 Pe 27; dard Bpedpous, from infancy, 1 Ti 319.t Bpéxw, [in LXX chiefly for qwa;] 1. to wet: Lk 744, 2. In late Gk. writers and vernac. = dew, to send rain, to rain (Kennedy, Sources, 39, 155): Mt 545; trop., B. wip x. Oetov, Lk 177°; impers., Bpéxer, at rains: Ja 57; with terds as subj., Re 11°%.t Bpovrh, -As, 9, [in LXX for Dy ;] thunder: Mk 3”, Jo 12%, Re 4° 6! 85 10% 4 1119 142 1618 19°. + tBpoxy, -fs, 7 (<< Bpéxw), [in LXX: Ps 67 (68)®, 104 (105)? (nya) *;] 1. = Bpoxerds, a wetting (in =., of irrigation in Egypt; Deiss., LAE, 77). 2. As in MGr. (Kennedy, Sowrces, 153), = derds, rain: Mt 77% 27,+ Bpsxos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Pr 65 (mp) 77! (pdm) 2225 (wpin), m1 Mac 48*;] a noose, a slip-knot, a halter: metaph., a restraint (not, as AV, R, txt., a snare): 1 Co 7**.t 86 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Bpuypds, -ot, 6 (<< Bpvyw), [in LXX: Pr 19! (O73), Si 51°*5] a biting, a gnashing of teeth: Mt 812 134% 50 9918 9451 95380 Tk 1328+ Bpdxw (Attic, Bpv«w), [in LXX: Jb 16°, Ps 34 (35)!6 36 (37)? 111 (112)!, La 216 (p-n)*;] 1. to bite or eat greedily. 2. to gnash, grind, with the teeth: Ac 7°.+ * Bpvw, poét., late prose and vernac., to be full to bursting; 1. of the earth producing vegetation. 2. Of plants putting forth buds. 3. Of springs, to gush with water: Ja 31!.+ BpSpa, -ros, 7d (cf. BiBpwoxw), [in LXX chiefly for box ;] food: Rogl4ts 20 7 Co, 843 1.08: pl. Me ila) Miko. ik ot Oe 1 Coote 1 Ti 4°, He 91° 13°; trop., of spiritual food, Jo 44, 1 Co 3? (ef. Bpaors).t Bpwowpos, -ov (<< Bpdors), [in LXX: Le 1978, Ne 975, Hz 47% (Say) * 5] eatable: Lk 2441.4 Bpdats, -ews, 7 (cf. BiBpwoxw), [in LXX chiefly for parts and derivatives of 5aN;] 1. eating: B. xai roots, Ro 1417, Col 216 (v. Lft., ICC, in 1.); c. gen. obj., 1 Co 84; metaph., corrosion, rust: Mt 61% 2°, 2. As also in cl. (Hom., al.) = Bpapa, food: Jo 67, m1 Co 97°, Col 21° (EV, but v. supr.), He 12'6; metaph., of spiritual nourishment, Jo 432 G27b; 55.4 ** Buitw (<< BvGos), [in LXX: m Mac 124*;] trans., to cause to sink, to sink: metaph., eis dAcOpov, I Ti 6°; pass., to sink, intrans.: Lk 57.+ Buds, -0d, 6, [in LXX: Ex 15°, Ne 94 (mbiyn), Ps 67 (68)” 68 (69) 15 106 (107)*4 (nbax)*;] 1. the bottom. 2. the depth of the sea, the deep sea: 11 Co 11?%.+ *t Bupoeds, -ews, 6 (<< Bipoa, a hide), late form for Bupoodewns, a tanner: Ac 943 10% 82,+ Bucowos, -n, -ov (<< Bvocos), [in LXX chiefly for ww, P72, etc. 5] made of Bicaos, fine linen: Re 18! 16 198 14+ Bucoos, -ov, 7 (cf. Heb. pra), [in LXX chiefly for ww, pra;] byssus, a fine species of flax, also the linen made from it: Lk 16!.t+ Bwpds, -od0, 6 (<< Baivw), [in LXX (Hex.) for Maa, in Proph., chiefly for MO2;] 1. any raised place, a platform. 2. an altar: Ac 1778 (cf. @vcvacrypiov and vy. DB, i, 75).+ 1 TaBBabd (Rec. -6a), 7, indecl., Gabbatha, the Greek trans- literation of an uncertain Aramaic word (DB, s.v.; Dalman, Words, 7), used as the equivalent of Avlootpwrov, stone pavement: Jo 19}8.+ FaBpmd, 6, indecl. (Heb. 5x aa, hero of God), the archangel Gabriel: Lk 11% 26,+ MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 87 *t ydyypawa, -ys, 7, @ gangrene, an eating sore, which leads to mortification : 11 Ti 2!7.+ rd8, 6, indecl. (Heb. 12), Gad (Ge 30" 4918, al.): Re 75.+ TaSapyvés, -7, -ov (, mw (iv Ki 23, al.), once for o°739 (Es 3°); 7d y., ra y., of a temple treasury, Ne 10%’, 11 Mac 3°, al.;] treaswry: also, apparently, the trumpet-shaped chests into which the peoples’ temple-offerings were thrown (DB, iv, 96; DCG, ii, 748): Mk 1244 43, Lk 211, Jo 870.+ Tatos, -ov, 6 (Taios, Rec.), Gaius, the name of a Christian; 1. of Macedonia: Ac 197%. 2. Of Derbe: Ac 20%. 3. Of Corinth: Ro 167%, 1Co 1!4, 4, The one to whom 1 Ep. Jo is addressed: ur Jo !.t yéda, -axros, 76, [in LXX for a5m;] milk: 1Co 97. Metaph., of elementary Christian teaching: 1 Co 3?, He 5!)18; 76 Aoyixov adodov y., the rational (spiritual) genuine milk (v. Hort, in 1.), 1 Pe 2? (in support of AV, milk of the word, v. ICC, in 1.).t Taddrys, -ov, 6 (originally syn. with cl. KéArys; cf. 1 Mac 8?, and v. next word), a Galatwn: Ga 3}.t Tadatia, -as, 7, Galatia; 1. a gentilic region in Asia Minor, settled by Gauls (iii/B.c.). 2. A Roman Province which included this region (DB, ii, 85 ff.): 1 Co 16!, Ga 17, m Ti 41° (T, Tr., mg., Tadd‘av), tke tt Tadatikés, -7, -ov (v. previous word), Galatian, belonging to Galatia: Ac 166 18?3,+ *yahyvn, -ys, 7, a calm: Mt 876, Mk 4%, Lk 84,t FadtiAaia, -as, (Heb. 537, the circle, district), Galilee, the name of the northern region of Palestine in NT times: I. trav é6vév, Mt 415 (LXX); @adacoa THs T., Mt 15°° (cf. Jo 61). TadtAaios, -aia, -atov, Galilean: Mt 26°, Mk 147, Lk 13)? 2259, 238, Jo 445, Ac 1!) 27 587+ FodXia, -as, 7, Gaul: T., Tr., mg., for Tadaria, 11 Ti 41°.+ FadXiwy, -wvos, 6, Gallio, proconsul of Achaia: Ac 181+ 1417+ Fapadyd, 6 (Heb. Syx*bipz), Gamaliel the elder, a Pharisee and Doctor of the Law: Ac 5*4 223.+ *yopéw, -@, [in LXX: Hs 103, 1 Mac 14, 1v Mac 16°*;] to marry; 1. of the man, to marry, take to wife (ducere): absol., Mt 1910 9925, 80 9488) Mk 1225, Lk 1737, 208435, y Co 72% 83; ¢. acc.: Mt 5% 199, Mk 6!7 10!!, Lk 142° 1618. 2. Of the woman, (a) mid. (and in late 88 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT writers, pass.), to give oneself in marriage, marry (nubere): 1 Co 7°; (b) in Hellenistic (M, Pr., 159), act. (as of the man), to marry: absol., 1 Co 72% 34 1 Ti 5414; ¢. acc., Mk 10!2. (3) Of both sexes: absol., rye ie re Cor ok *t yapifw (<< ydpos), to give in marriage, a daughter : 1 Co 7°8. Pass., Mt 223° 24388) Mk 126, Lk 1727 2035 (WH, mg., yapioxovra; cf. éx- yautlw).t * yapioxw, = yapilw, g.v.: Lk 205435, WH, mg. (Arist.).t ydpos, -ov, 6, [in LXX for Mmwn;] 1. a wedding, esp. a wedding- feast: Mt 22% 1%11,12) Jo 213, Re 19%9; pl. (Field, Notes, 16), Mt 222-459 9510 Tk 1296148, 2. marriage: He 134 (Cremer, 666).+ ydép, co-ordinating particle, contr. of ye dpa, verily then, hence, in truth, indeed, yea, then, why, and when giving a reason or explanation, for, the usage in NT being in general accord with that of cl.; 1. expli- cative and epexegetic: Mt 415 1912, Mk 116 5% 164, Lk 11%, Ro 7}, 1 Co 16°, al. 2. Conclusive, in questions, answers and exclamations: Mt 9° 2723, Lk 975 2927, Jo 939, Ac 8%! 1637 1985, Ro 1576, 1 Co 91°, Phi 17° (Hllic., in 1.), 1,.Th 27°, al. 3. Causal; Mé 125 271% 6 323° Mk 122.96 Lk 1% 15) Jo 27 Ac 275 Ro 1%" 1:Co 11® Re 1*) als; giving the reason for a command or prohibition, Mt 2?° 3°, Ro 131, Col 3°, 1 Th 4%, al.; where the cause is contained in an interrog. statement, Lk 222”, Ro 3% 43, 1 Co 1079; xai yap, for also, Mk 10%, Lk 682, 1 Co 5’, al.; id. as in cl. = etentm, where the xai loses its connective force (Bl., § 78, 6; Kithner’, ii, 854 f.), Mk 147°, Lk 166 2237, 11 Co 134. The proper place of ydp is after the first word in a clause, but in poets it often comes third or fourth, and so in late prose: 1 Co 11%, Yet ‘‘not the number but the nature of the word after which it stands is the point to be noticed”’ (v. Thayer, s.v.). yaotnp, -tpés, 4, [in LXX for JOA, év y. exew for MIN, &v >. AapBdvew for M7N;] 1. the belly: metaph., a glutton, Tit 1%. 2. the womb: év y. éxev, to be with child, Mt 11% 73@XX) 2419 Mk 1317, Lk 2123, 1 Th 5%, Re 12; & y. cvAdapB., to conceive, Lk 13!.t ye, enclitic postpositive particle, rarer in xowy than in cel., giving special prominence to the word to which it is attached, distinguishing it as the least or the most important (Thayer, s.v.), «deed, at least, even (but not always translatable into English); 1. used alone: Lk 118 18° Ro 82, 2. More freq. with other particles: adAd ye, Lk 2471, 1 Co 9?; dpa ye, Mt 729 1726, Ac 1777; dpa ye, Ac 8°; «i ye (Rec. etye), u Co 5%, Ga 34, Eph 3? 421, Col 123 (v. Meyer, Ellic., on Ga, Eph, ll. c.; Lft., on Ga, Col, ll. c.); «i 8& pyc, following an affirmation, Mt 61, Lk 106 13°; a negation, Mt 917, Lk 5%® 87 14%? ry Co 116; Kai ye (Rec. xatye, el. cat. . . ye), Lk 1942 (WH om.), Ac 2}8 1777; xavrovye (Li xairou ye, Tr. cai tou ye), Jo 47; pevodvye (Vv. S.V.); pate ye, V.S. mytr; opedov ¥é, 1 Co 48.+ reSedv, 5, indecl. in LXX and NT, in FlJ, Ant., v. 6, 3 and 4 -dvos (Heb. fy 432), Gideon (Jg 6-8): He 11%*.t MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 89 tyéevva (yéeva, Mk 94°, Rec.), -ns, 7 (perh. through Aram. O79, from Heb. O33 59, Ne 11°; oin-ja 19, Jo 18°; nin~ya ta, Iv Ki 2319; valley of (the son, sons of) lamentation); [in LXX the nearest approach to y. is yaievva, Jos 181° (Tai ‘Ovvop, A), elsewhere ¢dpayé ‘Ovdp (Jos 158, al.), v. Swete on Mk 943 ;] Gehenna, a valley W. and 8. of Jerusalem, which as the site of fire-worship from the time of Ahaz, was desecrated by Josiah and became a dumping-place for the offal of the city. Later, the name was used as a symbol of the place of future punishment, as in NT: Mt 5?% 30 1078, Mk 94% 4547, Lk 12°, Ja 3°; y. t. wupds, Mt 52 181°, prob. with ref. to fires of Moloch (DB, ii, 119); vids yeevvns, Mt 23; xpious yeevvys, 23°9.+ reOonpavel (Rec. -v7, LTr. -vei) indecl. (Heb. "39 Ma, oil-press), Gethsemane: called in Jo 18! a xjzos, but named only in Mt 26%, Mk 14*?.+ yeitwv, -ovos, 6, 7 (<< y7), [in LXX chiefly for Jaw ;] a neighbour : Lk 14}? 15%, Jo 98.+ yeddw, -d, [in LXX chiefly for pny, pniz;] to laugh: Lk 6; fut.) yeAdow (M, Pr., 154), ib. 21 (cf. xara-yeAdw).t yas, -wros, 6, [in LXX chiefly for piniy;] laughter: Ja 4°.t yepilo (<< yéuw), [in LXX: Ge 4517 (jyw), 1 Mac 54’, 1v Mac 34*>;] to fill; 1. properly, of a ship (Thuc., al.): Mk 4°? (pass.). 2. In late writers, generally (MGr., v. Kennedy, Sowrces, 155), c. ace., seq. gen., Mk 15°*, Jo 2° 618, Re 158; dad, Lk 1516, Rec. WH, mg. ; éx, Lk 151°, WH, Re 8°. Pass., absol.: Lk 147%.t yé (used only in pres. and impf.), [in LXX for nba, Niv3;] to be full ; 1. properly, of a ship (Xen.). 2. Generally (Plat., al.), (a) ¢. pen, rey MG 29°". Tuk 21?) Ro 3408S)” Re. 4% 5 5S Lo? 17344219; (b) seq. ex: Mt 237°; (c) c. ace. rei (called a solecism in WM, 251; Bl., § 36, 4), as in later Gk. from Byz. to Mod. times (Jannaris, Gr., 1319): Re 17%.+ yeved, -as, (<< y/yvopm), [in LXX chiefly for "47, 1 (Cremer, 148) ;] 1. race, stock, family (in NT, yévvnya, q.v.). 2. generation ; (a) of the contemporary members of a family: pl., Mt 1!” (cf. Ge 31°, ni) ; metaph., of those alike in character, in bad sense, Mt 171’, Mk 9}9, Lk 941 168, Ac 24°; (b) of all the people of a given period: Mt 2434, Mk 133°, Lk 2132, Phi 2!5; pl., Lk 148; esp. of the Jewish people, Mt 1116 193% 41, 42,49 164 2336, Mk 81228, [kc 781 112% 80-32, 60, 51 1725, Ac 1336, He 31 (LXX); shy y. atrod ris Sinyjoetar, Ac 893 EXX); (c) the period covered by the life-time of a generation, used loosely in pl. of successive ages: Ac 1416 1571, Hph 3°, Col 17°; cis yeveds xai y. (= arm 1b, Is 34”, al.), Lk 15; eis mdcas tas y. Tod aidvos rév aidvev, Eph 3?! (Hllic., in 1.; DCG, i, 639 f.).t yeveadoyéw, -& (<< yeved, Aeyw), [in LXX: 1 Ch 5! (wm )*;] to trace ancestry, reckon genealogy ; pass., seq. é«: He 7°.t 90 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT * yeveadoyla, -as, 7 (v. previous word); 1. the making of a pedigree. 2. a genealogy: pl., 1 Ti 14, Tit 3° (v. CGT, in 1., and ib. Intr., xlix ff. ; DB, ii, p. 141).t * yevéoua, -wv, td, neut. pl. of adj. -ws, -ov, relating to birth (< yéveors) ; 1. in Attic Gk., a commemoration of the dead. 2. In late Gk., a birthday feast (= cl. yevePAta; so in 7., v. MM, Eap., x; ef. also Rutherford, NPhr., 184): Mt 14°, Mk 671.+ yéveats, -ews, 7 (<< y’yvopar), [in LXX chiefly for nwin ;] 1. origin, lineage: BiBdos yevéoews (as in Ge 2% 51), Mt ll. 2. birth: Mt 18, Lk 1 (Rec. yéwnots); mpocwrov ris y., face of his birth (‘‘ what God made him to be,” Hort., in 1.), Ja 12°; 6 tpoxos tis y., the wheel (course) of birth or creation (‘‘the wheel of man’s nature according to ‘ts original Divine purpose,” Hort), Ja 3°.+ yeverh, -75, 7 = yeven, Ion. for yeved, [in LXX: Le 2547 ("py maw), Hs 417*;] birth: & y., Jo 9'.t t+ yévnpa, -Tos, TO (<< y/yvopmar), [in LXX chiefly for ANIAM;] a form not found in cl., but used in LXX, NT and z. (Bl., § 3, 10; M, Pr., 45; Deiss., BS, 184), as distinct from yévvnua, q.v., of frutt, produce of the earth: Mt 267°, Mk 14%5, Lk 1218 2238, 11 Co 91° (Rec. yorrqua).t yervdw, -@ (<< yevva, poét. for yévos), [in LXX chiefly for preriajde of the father, to beget: c. acc., Mt 11°, Ac 7% 29; seq. éx, Mt 13% 6, 2. Of the mother, to bring forth, bear: Lk 11% 2379, Jo 1621; eis SovAretav, Ga 424, Pass. (1) to be begotten: Mt 17°; (2) to be born: Mt Q1,4 1912 9624. Mk 1421, Lk 155, Jo 34, Ac 729, Ro 94, He 117; seq. éis, Jo 162! 1837, 11 Pe 2; éy, Ac 28 223, (duaprias), Jo 994; ard, He 11” (WH, mg., éyev-); éx, Jo 118 3° 841; c.adj., ruprds y., Jo 9?; ['Pwpatos], Ac 228; xara cdpxa: x. mvedpa: Ga 42°, Metaph.; pdyas, 1 Ti 273; ipas éyevvyoa, I Co 4, (dv), Phm!?; in quotation, Ps 2’ (LXX), Ac 13°23, He 1° 5°; of Christians as begotten of God, born again: Jo 1 335-8 t Jo 229 39 47 5} 4518 (ef. dva-yevvdw) ; (Cremer, 146).t yévynpa, -ros, TO ( seq. Sud c. gen., Mk 62, Ac 243; taro, Lk 1317: cis, Lk 423 - ev, I Co Se droypady, Lk 27; dvaxptots, Ac 2575; dears, He 92; 6 vopos, Ga 31"; 16 racxa, Mt 262. 4. to become, be made, come to be: ec. pred., Mt 4°, Lk 4°, Jo 2°, 1 Co 134, al.; seq. as, ace, Mt 10%, Mk 976; eis (M, Pr., 71 f.), Mk 1920, al.; c. gen., Re 1125; id., of age, Lk 2%; c. dat., y. dy Spi ([LXX for whnd | ma, Ru 122, al.;] v. Field, No tes, 156), Ro 74; seq. ev, Ac 22!7, Re 11°, al.; érdvw, Lk 1919; perd, c. gen., Mk 16191, Ac ge: seq. eis, eri (Field, Notes, 1385), kata (ib., 62), c. acc. of place, Ac 2016 21%5 277, al.; seq. éx, Mk 9’, Lk 322, 1 Th 27, al. Aoristic pf. yeyova (M, Pr., 52, 145 f.; Field, Notes, 1 f.), Mt 25°, Lk 10°, al. Aor. éyev76y (for éyevero, M, Pr., 139 f.; ‘Mayser, 379), Mt 1123, al. (Cf. amo-, dia-, emt-, rapa-, ovp- wapa-, Tpo-.) ywdokw (= yuyv-: Vv. previous word. $o also vulgar Attic, in Inser., v. Thumb, MGV, 207), [in LXX chiefly for yt ;] to be taking 1 m knowledge, come to know, recognize, perceive, understand ; in past tenses to know, realize; pass., to become known °C. acc., Mt DRS Mie 542, Col 48, 1 Th 35, al. Pass., Mt 1026, Phi 4°, al.; seq. om, Mt 214, Jo 41 al.; ri, Mt 68; dad, Mk 154°; 6, Ro 715; +. Aeyoueva, Lk 18°45 + Gédypa, Lk 1247; 7. xapdias, Lk 161°; c. acc. pers., of recognition by God, 1 Co 83, Ga 4°; by Christ, neg., Mt 77%; freq. of the knowledge of divine things, of God and Christ: 7. Gedv, Ro 1?!, Ga 4°; 7. rarépa, Jo 68s 7, KUpuov, He 81! @XX); vot Kupiov, Ro 113; Cipeae Jo 173, I Jo 36; ra rod rvevparos, I Co 214; +. rvevua, 1 Jo 4s tT. dAnbeav, Jo opty of Christ’s knowledge of the Father (éry.), Mt 1127 (Dalman, Words, 282 ff.). In Hellenistic writers [LXX for Heb. ym, Ga 4}, al.], of sexual intercourse, to know carnally: Mt 125, Lk 134 (Cremer, 153). SYN.: y., to know by observation and experience is thus prop. disting. from oléa, to know by reflection (a mental process, based on MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 93 intuition or information); ef. also é¢iornms, cvvinm. (Cf. dva-, dia-, €mt-, KaTa-, Tpo~yiwwwoKw.) y\edxos (-e0s), -ovs, 76, [in LXX for J, Jb 32'°*;] must, sweet new wine (Arist.): Ac 213,+ yAuxus, -eia, -v, [in LXX chiefly for pimp;] Ja 34»; opp. to mixpov, dAvkov, Re 10% 1°.+ yAdooa, -ns, 7, [in LXX chiefly for yiw> ;] 1. the tongue, as the organ of speech: Mk 73%, Lk 164 1674, Ac 2?6(LXX), Ro 318(LXX) 1411 (LXX) 7 Co 149 Phi 211, Ja, 126 35 &8 7 Pe 310(LXX) 1 Jo 318, Re 161°; of a tongue-like object, Ac 2°. 2. a tongue, language: Ac 21"; joined with dvA7, Aads, éOvos, freq. in pl., Re 5° 79 10" 11° 137 14° 17!*; Aadrey érépas y., Ac 24; y. Aad xawais, WH, txt. (RV, mg., omit xawwais), Mk 1617; Aaretv yAwoous, yAdson (v. ICC, ll. c.; DB, iv, 793 if), Mk 161’, WH, txt., R, mg., Ac 1046196, 1 Co 129° 131 14% 4°6, 13, 18, 23, 27, 39 5 yAdooa (= Ady év yAwoon, I Co 141%), 1 Co 13° 14%; yévy yAwooar, 1 Co 121% 28; zpocedxerOar yAwoon, I Co 1414; yAdooay éxew, 1 Co 1476 (Cremer, 163, 679).t+ t+ yAwoodkopov, -ov, 7d, vernac. form of cl. yAwoookopetov (<< yAdooa, xopéw), [in LXX for finN, m Ki 6%, 1 Ch 24%1%1*5) 1. = el. -ctoy (v. supr.), a case for holding the reeds or tongues of musical instru- ments. 2. As in LXX, z. (MM, s.v.), a box, chest: Jo 12° 139.+ yvapeds, -éws, 6, Ion. and xowy form of Att. cvadevs ( (Pr 1917);] to lend money on interest: Lk 634;35; mid., to borrow: Mt 5*.+ SYN.: xtxypnue (V.S. xpdw), to lend in a friendly way. Aaviqd, 6, indecl. (Heb. 5N233, God is my Judge), Daniel, the prophet: Mt 24',t Sdviov, -ov, To (late form of daveov, Rec.; v.s. daviw), [in LXX: De 24" (mufz) 155 1° (way hi.), 1v Mac 28*;] a loan: Mt 18?7.+ Savors, -0v, 6 (late form of -eerys, Rec.; v.s. davei{w), [in LXX: v Ki 4!, Ps 108 (109) (mwa), Pr 2913 (wr), Si 29° * | a money-lender : Lk 741.+ ** Samavdw, -, [in LXX: Tol’, 1 Mac 14°, al.;] 1. to spend, expend: c. acc., Mk 5”°; seq. emi, c. dat. pers., Ac 2174; trép, 1 Co 12%, 2. to consume, squander: Lk 1514; év r. 7dovais (on the constr. with év, v. Hort, Mayor, in 1.), Ja 4° (ef. éx-, rpoo- 6.).+ Sandvy, -ns, 7, [in LXX: o Hs 648 (NPI), Da LXX Bel”, al.;] expense, cost: Lk 14*.+ AavelS (Rec. Aafid), 6, indecl. (Heb. 111), David, King of Israel : Mt 16 123 et al.; oxnvi) A., Ac 151%; Kreis A., Re 37; Opdvos A., Lk 157; pita A., Re 5°; Baowrea A, Mk 111; vids A., the Messiah (Ps. Sol., 1723; for other reff. in Jewish lit., v. Dalman, Words, 317), Mt 1) 9?7, et al.; év A., i.e. the Psalter, He 4’. 8é (before vowels 8’; on the general neglect of the elision in NT, » v. WH, App., 146; Tdf., Pr., 96), post-positive conjunctive particle ; MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT oo 1. copulative, but, in the next place, and, now (Abbott, JG, 104): Mt 12%, 11 Co 616 1 Pe 157; in repetition for emphasis, Ro 3?) 22 939, 1 Co 2°, Ga 2?, Phl 28; in transition to something new, Mt 18 2), Lk 131, Jo 74, Ac 61, Ro 88, 1 Co 7! 8!, al.; in explanatory parenthesis or addition, Jo 31%, Ro 58,1 Co 1!2, Eph 2 5%? al.; as dé, Jo 29; Kai .. . 0¢, but also, Mt 108, Lk 176 Jo 65, Ro 1173, al.; xai day dé, yea even if, Jo 816, 2. Adversative, but, on the other hand, prop., answering to a foregoing pév (q.v.), and distinguishing a word or clause from one preceding (in NT most freq. without wév; Bl., § 77, 12): éay dé, Mt 61423, al.; éyw (ov, etc.) dé, Mt 5” 6°, Mk 8) al.; 6 8, airos dé, Mk 145, Lk 44° al.; after a negation, Mt 61% ?°, Ro 34, 1 Th 52, al. Sénats, -ews, 7) (<< Séomar), [in LXX for AINA, TI, nda , ete. ;] 1. a wanting, need (so Ps 21 (22)*5). 2. an asking, entreaty, swpplica- tion; in NT always addressed to God: Lk 118, 1 Co 1", Phil 1°, nm Ti 13, Ja 5'6, 1 Pe 312@XX); with vyoreta, Lk 237; rpocevyy, -ai, Eph 68, Phl 4°, 1 Ti 2! 55; ixernpiar, He 5’; zpocxaprépyois, Eph 618; evrevges, 1 Ti2!; 8. wovetcba (Deiss., BS, 250), Lk 5%*, Phi 14 (pl.), 1 Ti 2'; seq. irép, 11 Co 914, Ph] 14; zepié, Eph 61°; zpds, Ro 10'.t Syw.: zpocevxn, used of prayer in general, while 6. gives promi- nence to the sense of need; on the other hand, 8. is used as well of requests from man to man, while 7z. is limited to prayer to God. évrevéts, in the papyri, is the regular word for petition to a superior (Deiss., BS, 250; cf. the Pauline evrvyxavev, to entreat). Cf. also edxy (Ja 5!), airnua, txernpia (Tr., Syn., § li; Cremer, 73, 174, 684). Sei, impersonal (Sé¢w), [in LXX chiefly for infin. with 5;] one must, it is necessary: c. inf., Mt 26°4, Mk 137, Ac 59, al.; c. ace. et inf., Mt 1621, Mk 8?!, Jo 37, Ac 25", al.; with ellipse of acc., Mt 2378; of ace. and inf., Mk 1314, Ro 127 825; ov (um) det (non licet), ought not, must not: Ac 254, n Ti 224; impf., ede, of necessity or obligation in past time regarding a past event (Bl., § 63, 4), Mt 18%, Lk 15%, Jo 44, Ac 2771, al.; periphr., déov éoriv (as in Attic, xpeov éore = xpy, V.S. déov), Ac 19°6; id., with ellipse of éoriv, 1 Pe 1°; ra py Séovra (= & ov Nee) fee, SYN.: édeiAer, expressing moral obligation, as distinct from det, denoting logical necessity and xp, a need which results from the fitness of things (v. Tr., Syn., § evii, 10; Westce. on He 2', 1 Jo 2°; Hort on Ja 31°), *Seiypa, -ros, To (<< deixvypn); 1. (cl.) a thing shown, a specimen, 2. = cl. rapdd- (cf. d8-, 1 Pe 2°), an example (a warning): Ju’.t *t SerypatiLw (<< dSetyya), a rare word (ICC, ll. c.), to make a show of, to expose: Mt 1!® (Rec. wapaéd-, q.v.), Col 21°.t Seikvupt, Secxvdw (v. Bl., § 23, 1; Veitch, s.v.), [in LXX chiefly for MN hi.;] to show, c. acc. rei (pers.), dat. pers.; (a) to show, exhibit : Mt 48 8¢, Mk 144 1415 Lk 45 514 2074 221 2440, Jo 218 520 1032 2070, Ac 73\LXX), 1 Ti 615, Re 17! 21% 10 291,58 pass., He 8°@XX); (b) to make known: Mt 1621, Jo 1489, Ac 1028, 1 Co 1231, Re 11 41, 228; (c) to prove: Ja 238 313 + 100 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Seria, -as, 7 (<(dedds), [in LXX for MN, ANA, etc.;] cowardice, tumidity (never in good sense): 11 Ti 17.t SYN.: goBos, fear, in general, good or bad; etAdBea (q.v.), apprehension generally, but chiefly piows fear, “that careful and watchful reverence which pays regard to every circumstance in that with which it has to deal” (cf. Tr., Syn., § x). t Sedidw, -@ (<< dedrca), [in LXX for ANN ni., IMB, etc.;] = the more freq. az00-, to be cowardly, timid, fearful: Jo 14*7.t Betdds, -7, dv (<< déos), [in LXX for J, etc. ;} cowardly, fearful : Mt 876, Mk 44°, Re 218.+ ** Selva, 6, 7, 70 (gen. -vos, dat. -w, acc. -va), [in Aq.: Ru 4!,1 Ki 21? (3) (Sm. also), 1v Ki 6°*;] such an one, a certain one, whom one cannot or will not name: Mt 26}8,t+ Sewds, adv. (<< déos), [in LXX: Jb 10'6, Wi 17°, al.;] 1. terribly: Mt 8°. 2. vehemently: Lk 1153.+ Seimvéw, -@ (<< dcizvov, q.v.), [in LXX: Pr 231 (and), Toso. Da LXX 1127*;] to take the chief meal of the day, to dine, to sup: Lk 178 227° (WH, br., R, mg. omits), 1 Co 117°; metaph., Re 3?°.t Seimvoy, -ov, 76, [in LXX chiefly for 12°NB (Da) ;] the chief meal of the day, dinner, supper: Mt 23°, Mk 12°, Lk 141724 2046, Jo 13? 4 217°, 1 Co 11?!; 3. wovetv, Mk 6!, Lk 141416 Jo 12?; xvpraxdy (q.v.) 8., 1 Co 11°; metaph. (Dalman, Words, 118), 8. 7. yapovu tr. dpviov, Re 19°; 8. 7. péya tT. Ocov, Re 1917.+ *t SerotBatpovia, -as, 7 (<< decdaiuwr, q.v.); 1. fear of the gods; (a) piety, religion; (b) superstition. 2. Objectively, a religion: Ac 25!9 (Cremer, 72, 682).+ * Serot-Saipwv, -ov (<< deidu, to fear; Saipwy, deity), reverent to the deity, religious ; compar. -poveotepovs (AV, too superstitiwus, R, txt., somewhat superstitious, a sense in wh. the word is sometimes used; cf. Field, Notes, 125), more religious, God-fearing, than others, quite religwus (Abbott, Hssays, 105 ff.; Deiss., LAH, 285): Ac 17?2.+ SYN.: eiaeBys (q.v.), OeooeBys, Opjoxos (Cremer, 681; DB, ect., 1424), Séka, oi, ai, ra, ten: Mt 2074, al.; Oras qpepay 8., ie. of brief duration: Re 219, t Sexa-80w, Rec. for dudexa: Ac 197 2411.+ t Sexa-é&, = éxxaidexa, sixteen (Jannaris, Gr. § 645): Re 1838, L, mg. (for éEjxovra €€; v. Swete, in 1.).t t 8exa-oxtd, T for déxa dxro, eighteen: Lk 134,+ t Sexa-névre, [in LXX: Ex 27), 1 Mac 10*, al.;] late form of mevtexa ‘dexa, fifteen: Jo 118, Ac 275, WH, mg., ib. 28, Ga 118.+ Aexd-troXts, -ews, 7, Decapolis, a region east of the Jordan con- taining ten cities: Mt 4%, Mk 57° 731.+ t Sexatécoapes, -wy, oi, al, -a, ta, [in LXX: Ge 314), To 81% al. 5] = cl. recoapecxaidexa, more freq. in later Gk. than the older form and in MGr. (for thirteen and upwards) universal, fowrteen: Mt 117, 1 Co 12?, Ga 21 (cf. rexoapeoxaidexatos).t MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THF NEW TESTAMENT 101 Sexdrn, -75, 7, prop. fem. (sc. pépos) of S€xaros, -y, -ov, [in LXX for "wy: Ge 14%, Ne 12%, et al.;] a tenth part, a tithe: He 7% 4%? (for a curious inversion of the Biblical use, v. MM, s.v.).t Békartos, -7, -ov (< déxa), [in LXX for wy and cognate forms ;] tenth: Jo 14°, Ac 19° (WH, txt., RV omit), Re 1113 2170.+ tSexatéw, -@, = cl. -revw (<(dexdry), [in LXX: Ne 1087 68) (nivy pi.) *;] to take tithe of: c. acc. pers., He 7°; pass. to pay tithe: He 7°.+ tSexrds, -7, -ov, verbal adj. of dé€youa, [in LXX chiefly for Pea: Pr 11}, al.;] acceptable: Lk 419@XX)24, Ac 10%, 11 Co 6? (LXX), Phl 418 (cf. edrpocd-).t *SehedLo (<< d€dcap, a bait), to allure by a batt : metaph., to allure, entice: c. acc., 11 Pe 2'418; pass., Ja 1!4.+ Aehpartia, v. Aadparia. SévBpov, -ov, 7d, [in LXX for py, etc.;] a tree: Mt 3", al.; 8. dyabov, Mt 71718; 8. xadov, Mt 1233, Lk 64%; 8. campov, Mt 71% 18 12°, Lk 643; yiveoOu 8., Mt 13%; y. eis 8., Lk 13)9. *+t Befto-Bddos, -ov, 6 (<< defids, BddAAw), One who throws with the right hand: L for degvoAaBos, Ac 2323,+ * SeftoAdBos, -ov, 6 (<< defis, AauPavw), a kind of soldier, prob. a spearman (Vg., lancearius) or slinger: Ac 2373,+ Se€ids, -d, -ov, [in LXX chiefly for "M3;] the right: Mt 5, Jo 181°, al. ; drAa 8., weapons carried in the right hand, i.e. for offence, 11 Co 67; 4 8. xe(p, Mt 5%, Lk 6%, al.; 7 8. (sc. xeip), Mt 63, al.; emi rip 38., in the right hand (R, txt., on R, mg.), Re 5!; ddovac rv 8., in friend- ship (Deiss., BS, 251), Ga 2°; metaph. of power, 77 6. avrod, Ac 2%8 531; ra 8., the right side, Mk 165; éx defav, on the right hand, c. gen., Mt 25%% 34, Mk 1527, Lk 111, al.; of a place of honour in the Messianic Kingdom (cf. 111 Ki 21%, Ps 44 (45)!9), xaOioar éx Sefiav, Mt 2071, Mk 10%”; of the heavenly session of Christ, Mt 26%, Mk 14%, He 118 (Cremer, 172). Sonar (mid. of déw, 11, q.v., as depon.), [in LXX for yan, etc. ;] to want for oneself; 1. to want, need: (a) absol.; (b) c. gen. 2. to beg, request, beseech, pray ; (i) in general: absol., Ac 263, WH; c. gen. pers., Lk 51? 8% 8 (ééeciro; T, édeero, cf. Veitch, s.v. dew) 9°, Ac 8%4 2139, 11 Co 5°, Ga 412; seq. iva, Lk 94°; seq. 70, c. inf., 1 Co 10?; c. gen. pers. et rei, 11 Co 8; (ii) of prayer to God: absol., Ac 4!; seq. ei wus, Ro 1); va, Lk 21° 2932; cis 76,1 Th 319; trép euod pos 7, kUptov, ows, Ac 8*4; c. gen., rod Kupiov, drws, Mt 9%8, Lk 107; rod Geos, Ac 10?; seq. ei dpa, Ac 822,¢ SYN.: airéw, and cf. dénors. Séov, -ovros, 7d (neut. part. of det, used as subst.), [in LXX- Si prol.*4, 1 Mac 1211, 11 Mac 118*; pl. ra 56., for ond, Ex 1672, m Ki 422 (52), Pr 243! (308); Nw, Ex 21%; sa°mp, Da rH 11%; To 5%, 102. MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT m1 Mac 132°*;] that which is needful, due, proper: 8. éoriv (periphr. for de?, q.v.), Ac 19°°, with ellipse of éoriv, 1 Pe 16; 7a yw 6., 1 Ti 513.+ ¥* Sos, -ous, 76 (<< deidw), [in LXX: 1 Mac 317 80 1222 1316 1523 * 5) fear, awe, reverence: pera edAaBelas cai 6., He 1278,+ SYN.: derLa, poBos. AepBatos, -a, -ov, of Derbe: Ac 204.t AépBn, -ns, 7, Derbe, a city of Lycaonia: Ac 14% 20 161.+ Séppa, -tos, TO (< dépw), [in LXX for "iy;] the skin, hide of beasts : év aiyious 6., He 11°7.t Sepudtivos, -7, -ov (<< deppa), [in LXX for sy;] of skin, leathern : Mt 34, Mk 1° (ef. 1v Ki 18).+ Béppis, -ews, 7 (<< d€pos = dépya), [in LXX: Ex 267* (Ay p), Za 134 (MIAN), etc.;] a skin: Mk 16 (D, from Za, l.c.; Swete, in 1; Rec., Edd. rpiyas; cf. MM, Hap., x).t dépw, [in LXX: Le 1°, 1 Ch 29%4 351! (awe hi.)*;] 1. to skin, flay. 2. (cf. Eng. slang, hide) to beat, thrash: c. acc., Mt 21%°, Mk 12355 Lk 201% 11 9983 Jo 1823, Ac 549 1637 2219; ws dépa dépwv, I Co 926; cis zpdcwrov 8., 11 Co 11°. Pass., Mk 13°, Lk 1247 48 (apyoerae moAAas, dAiyas, SC. wAnyas).t Seopedw (< Seopds), [in LXX for 9ON (Jg 164, al.), odbx pi. (Ge 377, al.), etc.;] 1. to put im chains: Lk 8%, Ac 224. 2. to bind, tre together: dopria, Mt 234.+ Seopéw, -@, Rec. for decpevu, q.v.: Lk 87°.+ Séopy (Rec. Secu), -ns, 7 (<< déw), [in LXX for MIN, Hx 127? * 5] a bundle: 8yoare aira cis Séopas (D, Orig., omit cis, and Blass thinks original reading, décpas déopas; v. Deiss., LAH, 125,), Mt 13°°.+ Séoptos, -ov (also -a, -ov ; <( Seopds), [in LXX for ON ;] 1. binding. 2. bound, captive; 6 8. as subst., a prisoner: Mt 271516 Mk 15°, Ac 1625: 27 2318 9514 27 9816 (Rec.) 17, He 1084 133; 6 8. rod Xpiorod, Eph 3}, ut Ti 18, Phm))9; 6 8. &y xupiw, Eph 41.t Seopds, -00, 6 (<< dew), [In LXX chiefly for 70N;] a band, bond : metaph., Lk 13!%; 6 decpods r. yAwoons, Mk 7% (for this expression in m., V. Deiss., LAE, 306 ff.; of actual bonds, v. Ruth., Gr., 9). Pl., decpol, Phl 13; Seopa (as also in cl.), Lk 89, Ac 1676 208; gen., dat., Ac 237° 9629.81) Phi 171417, Col 4°55, m Ti 2° Phm?® He 11%6 Jus; év trois 8. rod evayyeAtov, Phm 13,t *t Seapo-pudak, -Kos, 6 (Seopds, pvAag), a prison-keeper, gaoler: Ac 162: 27,36 (ef. dpyxud-, Ge 39?!).t Secpwrnptoy, -ov, 70, [in LXX for WOT MZ (Ge), NON] a prison: Mé 112, Ac 521,28 1626.+ Seopdrys, -ov, 6, [in LXX for WON, aHA;] a prisoner: Ac 27! *2,+ Seomdrys, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for JWN, "34N; in Jth MS FeO ovpavav x. t. yas]; a master, lord, correlative of dovAos, oikerns: 1 Ti 62 11 Ti 2?!, Tit 2°, 1 Pe 2'8; as title of God, voc., d¢o7ora (so usually in MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 103 LXX), Lk 29, Ac 4*4; 6 8. = voc. déo7ora (cf. Bl., § 33, 4), Re 61°; of Christ, 1 Pe 2}, Ju‘, R, txt. (but cf. mg.).t SYN.: xvpios (q.v.), implying limitation of authority and a more general relation than 6., which “denoted absolute ownership and un- controlled power” (Thayer). Seipo, adv., [in LXX chiefly for 79, mpd;] 1. of place; (a) hither, with verbs of motion; (0) (in cl. chiefly poét.) as an imperat., here! come!: Mt 1971, Mk 10#!, Lk 1872, Jo 114%, Ac 73 XX) 34 2 Xx), Re 17! 219, 2. Of time, hitherto, now: Ro 13.+ Seite, adv., as pl. of dedpo, 1. (b), q.v., [in LXX chiefly for 325 i] come on! come here! come!: c. imperat., Mt 25%4 28%, Jo 47° 212, Re 1917; c. subjc., Mt 215°, Mk 127; seq. driow, Mt 41°, Mk 11”; xpds, Mt 118; cis, Mt 224, Mk 631. * Seutepatos, -a, -ov (<< devrepos), adj. with adverbial sense; on the second day: Sevrepator 7AOopev, Ac 2818,+ *t Seutepd-mpwros, -ov, second-first (in what sense, there is no satis- factory explanation. The reading is prob. not original, v. JCC, in 1.; DCG, i, 411; ii, 541, 724): Lk 61, WH, mg., R, mg.t SeUtepos, -a, -ov, second in order, with or without idea of time: Mt 2276, 39 al.; @dvaros, Re 211 2014 218; yapis, 1 Co 1. In neut. as adv., secondly, a second time; opp. to zparov: Jo 3* 2116, 1 Co 1278, Re 198; 76 5., m Co 132, Ju5; ev +. 8., at the second time: Ac 7'8; in later usage (as 1 Mac 91), éx 8., Mk 1472, Jo 974, Ac 11°, He 978, 8éxouar, depon. mid., [in LXX chiefly for np>;] to receive, accept ; 1. c. ace. rei, of taking or accepting what is offered: ypaypara, Lk 16° 7; id. in different sense, Ac 2871; aornjpiov, Lk 2217; wasdiov (eis . ayxdAas), Lk 2°8; wepixepadaiav, waxaipavy, Eph 61"; érurrodds, Ac 22°; t. Bacirciav tr. @eod, Mk 101°, Lk 1817; Aoyla Zévra, Ac 738; evayyédor, 11 Co 114; +. ydpw +. @eot, 1 Co 61; metaph., of mental acceptance, Mt 1114; +. Acyov, Lk 88, Ac 84 111 174, 1 Th 16 218, Ja 191; ra 7, mvevpatos, I Co 214; 7, mapaxAnow, 11 Co 817; 7. aydarny tr. adnOeias, m Th 2! 2. C. acc. pers., of receiving kindly or hospitably, Mt 1G At Mie GE Lik 95 6 10810 Jo. 4% 1 Co 7 1116 Ga 4%, Col 41°, He 11%; za:déov, Mt 18°, Mk 997, Lk 948; eis ofkous, oxyvas, Lk 1649; d€fac 7. rvedua pov, Ac 7°; dv det ovpavoy dééacGa, Ac 372 (cf. dva-, dzo-, dia-, eio-, éx-, dar-ex-, év-, emi-, Tapa-, mpoo-, to-déxomat; Cremer, 174).t ; Séw (I), [in LXX chiefly for 9ON;] to tie, bind, fasten ; (1) c. ace. rei, seq. cis deopas, Mt 13°°; of an ass, Mt 212, Mk 11%) 4, Lk 19°, (2) c. ace. pers., of swathing a dead body, éOovios, Jo 1949; dedopevos rt. mooas . . . keupias (BI., § 34, 6; Kiithner, iii, 125), Jo 1144; of binding with chains, dyyéAous, Re 914; a demoniac, rédas x. dAvoeot, Mk 5% 4; captives, Mt 1279 14% 2218 272, Mk 327 617 15457, Jo 181% 24, Ac 9% 14,21 2111,18 995,29 9427, Col 48, Re 207; ddtvoeor, Ac 12° 2133. Metaph., 6 Adyos 7. @eod, 11 Ti 2°; of Satan binding by disease (MM, s.yv.), Lk 13!°; of constraint or obligation, Ac 202; of the marriage bond, 104 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 1 Co 73°; id. c. dat. pers., dvdpi, Ro 72; yuvasi, 1 Co 727; in Rabbinic lang. (Dalman, Words, 213 f.), to forbid, declare forbidden, Mt 16° 1818 (cf. xara-, ept-, ovv-, bro-Sew; Cremer, 82).t Séw (II), Attic, to want, miss ; mid., déoua, q.v. $4, consecutive co-ordinating particle with no exact equiv. in Eng., giving greater exactness and emphasis to the word or words to which it is attached; sometimes translatable as now therefore, then, verily, certainly. 1. With verbs: imperat., Ac 6% (WH, mg.) 13?, 1 Co 62°; hort. subjc., Lk 215, Ac 15*°; indic., 84 ov (T, dyzov, q.v.), He 916. 2. With pronouns: 6 8%, now this is he who, Mt 13?%.+ *t Sydavyds, adv. (<< d4Aos, adyy), clearly: Mk 8”, T, WH, mg. (for tyAavyas, q.v.).t SAdos, -y, -ov, [in LXX for HN, etc.;] 1. visible. 2. clear to the mind, evident: Mt 2678; 8. (sc. éoriv), seq. drt, 1 Co 15?’, Ga 3".+ SYN.: gavepds, with ref. to outward appearance, manifest as opp. to concealed; 6. with ref. to inner perception, evident, known, under- stood. Sndéw, -&, [in LXX chiefly for w;] to make plain, declare: c. acc., I Co 313, Col 18, He 98 1227; c. dat. pers., 11 Pe 1'*; c. dat. pers., seq. mrepi (pass.), I Co 1!!; seq. eis, 1 Pe 11.+ SYN.: éudavilw, to make manifest, render visible to the sight; 6. to render evident to the mind. Anpas, 6 (perh. contracted from Anpryrpos), Demas, a companion of St. Paul: Col 414, Phm #4, 11 Ti 41°.t Syunyopéw, -@ (<< djpos, dyopevw, to speak im the assembly), [in LXX: Pr 2466 (3031), 1v Mac 5!°*;] to deliver an oration: Ac 12?1.+ Anpatptos, -ov, 6, Demetrius ; 1. a silversmith, Ac 197438, 2. A Christian disciple, m1 Jo}?.t ** Snproupyés, -00, 6 (<< djuos, epyov), [in LXX: m Mac 4'*;] 1. one who works for the people. 2. Univ., an author, builder, maker ; the maker of the world (Xen., Mem., 1, 4, 9, al.), He 11?%.t SYN.: xriorns, creator, texvirns, craftsman, designer. In He, l.ce., r. has reference to the plan, 6. to its execution. Sipos, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for AMpwA;] 1. a district, country. 2. the common people, the people generally; esp. the people assembled : AiG i222 eo eer, ; SYN.: dads, the people at large: 8., the people as a body politic ; opp. to 6. is éyAos, the unorganized multitude. vos, in sing., means in NT as in Gk. writers generally, a nation, but in pl. denotes the rest of mankind apart from the Jews: Gentiles. X. also, rare in cl. (Att. Aews), is freq. in LXX and NT, and usually limited to the chosen people, Israel (cf. Cl. Rev., i, 42f.; Cremer, 689). ** Snudavos, -a, -ov (<< Sppos), [in LXX: m Mac 6", 111 Mac 2?7 47 * 5) belonging to the people, public: Ac 5!8; dat. fem. used adverbially (cl.); (a) at the public expense, by public consent; (b) publicly: Ac Poe 1825) 2020rT *t Snvdpiov, -ov, 7d, the Lat. denarius, a Roman coin, nearly equal MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 105 to the Spayyu7, q.v.: Mt 1828 202% 15 2319 Mk 687 1215 145, Lk 741 1035 2074, Jo 67 125, Re 6°; 16 ava 8., Mt 20!%.+ Sy-wote, indef, adv. (also written 8) more), with generalizing force; 1. absol., sometwme. 2. With adv. or relat., -soever: o8., Jo 5{4] (L, oiwdnzorodv).t *$y-mou (WH, 87 ov), indef. adv., mostly in sense of surely, of course, we know: He 2! T (WH, 87 zrov).t Aia, acc. of Zevs, q.v. Sid (before a vowel 8’, exc. Ro 8!, m Co 5’, and in pr. names; Tdf., Pr., 94), prep. c. gen., acc., as in cl.; 1. ¢. gen., through; (i) of Place, after verbs of motion or action: Mt 2! 1243, Mk 28, Lk 430, Jo 44, 1 Co 11%, al.; cafecOar (S:ac-) 5. rupos, datos, 1 Co 315, 1 Pe 320; Brérew 8. éodrrpov, 1 Co 13!2; metaph., of a state or condition: Ro 147° 11 Co 2¢ 5%19; 8. ypduparos, axpoBvorias (Lft., Notes, 263, 279), Ro 27 411; 80 trropovas, Ro 87°. (ii) Of Time; (a) during which: Mt 26%, Mk 1458, Lk 55; 8. ravrds rod Cyv, He 21°; 8. ravrds (Staravrds in Mk 55, Lk 245%), always, continually, Mt 181°, Ac 2?5(LXX) 10? 2416 Ro 1110(@XX) tt Th 316, He 9° 1315; (6) within which: Ac 13; 8. vuxrds, Ac 5! 16° 171° 2331; (c) after which (Field, Notes, 20; Abbott, JG, 255 f.): Mk 21, Ac 2417, Ga 21. (iii) Of the Means or Instrument; (1) of the efficient cause (regarded also as the instrument): of God, Ro 11°, r Co 19, Ga 4’, He 2!° 721; of Christ, Ro 18 5417, 1 Co 152}, I Pe 4", al.; 8. 7. dpadv dejoews, Ro 11", 11 Co 14, Ga 475, al.; (2) of the agent, instrument or means; (a) c. gen. pers., Mt 112, Lk 17, Jo 11’, Ac 116, Ro 2!6, 1 Co 171, Eph 15, He 214, Re 1}, al; two 7. xupiov 4. 7. mpopytov (8. r. kupiov, I Th 47 (M, Th., in 1.); Lft., Rev., 121 f.), Mt 12 215, Ro 12; 6. émiroAns as 8. jay (Field, Notes, 202), 1 Th 2?; 8. &. (NTD, 22), 1 Pe 5"; (b) c. gen. rei (where often the simple dat. is used in cl.; Jannaris, Gr., 375), Jo 114, Ac 5!2; 8. +. riorews, Ro 3°; 8. Adyou Geod, 1 Pe 178; 8. wapaBodArs, Lk 84; dovrcvew 8. 7. dydrns, Ga 513; 8. émayyeAlas, Ga 318. 2. C. acc.; (i) rarely, as c. gen., through (Hom), 8. pwécov Sayapias (ICC, in 1.; Bl., § 42, 1; Robertson, Gr., 581), Lk 1711. (ii) by reason of, because of, for the sake of ; (a) c. ace. pers. (M, Pr., 105), Mk 2, Jo 65? 11, Ro 879; (6) c. acc. rei, 8. POovov, Mt 27'8, Mk 151°; 8. poBov, Jo 7'% 201%; 8. aydarnv, Eph 24; 8. rovro, freq., for this cause, therefore, Mt 6°, Mk 614, Lk 114°, Jo 6°, al.; id. seq. 67, Jo 5!6 1017, al.; 8. 7, why, Mt 9114, Mk 218 Jo 745, al.; 6. ro, c. inf., Mk 54, Lk 9’, Ja 42. 3. In composition, (1) through, as in daBaivw; (2) of separation, asunder, as in diacrdw; (8) of distri- bution, abroad, as in diayydAdw; (4) of transition, as duaAAdoow; (5) of “perfective ’’ action (M, Pr., 112f., 115f.), as diuadvyw, diaxaPapitw. $ia-Baivw, [in LXX chiefly for "ay ;] 1. to make a stride. 2. to step across, cross over ; (a) trans.: +. @dAaccav, He 112°; (6) intrans.: seq. eis, Ac 16°; zpds, Lk 1676.+ S1a-Bédrw, [in LXX: Da LXX 38, rx 38 6%4 25) (pap Spy), 11 Mac 311, 1v Mac 4!*;] 1. to throw across. 2. To slander, defame, accuse falsely or maliciously : Lk 161 (Cremer, 120).+ 106 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT *§1a-BeBadopar, -odpar, to affirm confidently: Tit 38; seq. zepi, 1 Ti 1? (Cremer, 140).t+ * Sia-Bdérw; 1. to look straight before one. 2. to see clearly: Mt 75, Mk 8%, Lk 64 (of. duaBrAeyus, Aq., Is 611, for LXX avaB-).t SidBodos, -ov (<< diaBddrrqw, q.v.), [in LXX for wy (as Jb 1%), exe. Hs 74 8! (4¥, I7¥);] slanderous, accusing falsely. As subst., 6, %, ; (a) generally (cf. Es, ll. ¢.), a slanderer, false accuser: 1 Ti 3%7 (can in 1., but v. infr.) 3u, u Ti 3°, Tit 2°; (6) as chiefly in LXX, of Satan, the Accuser, the Devil: Mt 415811 1330 2541, Lk 4% 3) 6,18 giz, Jo 182, Ac 1088, Eph 4?’ 64, 1 Ti 367 (but v. supr. ); ag DUE Ie gue, Ja 47, 1 Pe 58, Ju®, Re 219 12% 12 207,10; civar &« tov ., Jo 844, 1 Jo 38; réxva Tov 6., 1 Jo 31°; vids, Ac 131°; metaph., of Judas, Jo 67 (Cremer, 121; DCG, ii, 605).t St-ayyéAdw, [in LXX for 35D pi., etc.;] to publish abroad, pro- claim : c. acc., Lk 9%, Ac 2176, ae a dud-ye (WH, dua ye). v.85. ** S.a-yivonat (Ion. and intel Gk. for Siayiyv- ), [in LXX, 1 Mac 1126*;] 1. to go through, to pass, e.g. r. vixta; absol., to live. 2. Of time, to intervene, elapse: ptcp., ¢. yuepdv twa, Ac 2513 ; ixavod xpovov, ib. 279; +. cafBarov, Mk 161.t Sia-yuvdokw (Vv. previous word), [in LXX chiefly for ym, and cf. 1 Mac 9!5;] 1. to distinguish, ascertain exactly: Ac 23. 2. As Athen. law-term, to determine: ta xaf’ tuds, your case, Ac 2472 (Cremer, 673).t *t S1a-yvwpilw, to publish abroad: Lk 21", Ree. (éyvapirev, Edd.).t ** Sid-yvwots, -ews, 7 (<< diayryvwonw), [in LXX: Wi 3!8*;] lia distinguishing, also as medical term. 2. As law-term (Lat. cognitio), determination, decision: Ac 2571 (Cremer, 674).t + 81a-yoyyé£w, [in LXX chiefly for T>, 71, as Ex 162, and ef. Si 34 (31)"4;] of a number, to murmur or mutter among themselves: Lk 1s 308 aay *t S1a-ypnyopéw, -@, (a) prop., to remain awake (R, mg.); (0) to be fully awake (BR, txt.) : Lk 9%?.+ St-dyw, [in LXX for Jay hi., etc. ;] 1. tocarry over. 2. Of time, to pass: Biov, 1 Ti 27; absol., to live, seq. ev, Tit 3%.t Sta-Séxopar, [in LXX for mwa (Deiss., BS, 115), 1398;] te recewe through another, recewe in turn: Ac T* (RY, in their turn ; v. Field, Notes, 116).t Siddypa, -ros, 76 (<< diadéw, to bind round), [in LXX for 33 (as Hs 1"), etc. ;] the band round the rapa of a Persian king; a diadem, the badge of royalty: Re 123 131 19!.+ SYN.: orédhavos, the badge of “‘ victory, of valour, of nuptial joy, of festal gladness”’ (but v. M, Th., i, 2!"; cf. DB, i, 530, 604). Sra-8iSpr, [in LXX for pdn pi., ete. ;] 1. te hand over, deliver ; Re 1718, Rec. 2. to distribute: Lk 112? 1872, Jo 611, Ac 4°°.+ MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 107 81d-Boxos, -ov, 5, 4) (<< diadéxouar), [in LKX: 1 Ch 18!” (M5), 1 Ch 2641 (mir) 287 (myyin), Si 461 488, 11 Mac 4° 1476*;] a successor: Ac 2427 (for usage in LXX and 7. in sense of court official, v. Deiss., BS, 115).t S.a-Lovvupt, (also -vvw), [in LXX for "3m, Ez 23! A*;] to gird round : éavrov, Jo 134; pass., ib. 13°; mid., to gird oneself with: c. acc., Jo 217.t SiabyKn, -ys, 7 (<< diariOyuu), [freq. in LXX, and nearly always for m73;] 1. as usually in cl., a disposition, testament, will (Plat., al.) : Ga 34 (R, mg., but v. Lft., in 1.), He 916,17 (R, txt.; MM, Hap., xi, ; Milligan, NTD, 75; Abbott, Hssays, 107; Deiss., LAH, 341; but v. infr.). 2. As in LXX (for m3) = cl. cvv6j«n, a convention, arrange- ment, covenant (exc. in the disputed cases mentioned above, always bet. God and man, “perhaps with the feeling that the da- compound was more suitable than the ovr- for a covenant with God—ouvv@. might suggest equal terms,’ MM, Ezp., l.c.): Ga 3 (R, txt., but v. supr., and cf. Thayer, s.v.), He 9&1!" (R, mg., Westc., in 1.; Hatch, Hssays, 47; but v. supr.), Mt 2676, Mk 1424, Lk 17, Ac 325 78, Ro 1127@Xx), 11 Co 314, Ga 317, He 722 88, ib, #10 (LXX) 94, 15-17, jp, 20 (LXX) 116 (LXX), 29 1224 1320 Re 1119; xawy 5., Mt 2675, and Mk 144 (R, mg.), Lk 2220, 1 Co 1175, 11 Co 36, He 8% @XX) 915; pl., Ro 94, Ga 424, Eph 2!2.+ St-aipeots, -ews, 7 (<< diarpéw), [in LXX chiefly for nz>ne 3] 1. a distinction, difference. 2. a dwision, distribution: 1 Co 124° (ef. diarpéw ; Cremer, 616).t St-aipéw, -, [in LXX for Ma (as Ge 15"), pdr (as Jos 185), etc. ;] 1. to divide into parts, cut asunder. 2. to distribute: c. ace. rei, dat. pers., Lk 15!2, 1 Co 12".+ * $ia-kabaipw, to cleanse thoroughly: Lk 31".t *t Sia-Kabapilw = -Jaipw: Mt 3.+ *t Sia-kat-ehéyxopnar, to confute completely: Ac 1878.+ * Staxovéw, & (<< diaxovos); 1. generally, to minister, serve, wait upon, especially at table, to do one a service, care for one’s needs: absol., Mt 2028, Mk 1045, Lik 104° 227%, 27, Jo 12? 1 Pe 411; dca dunxdvycer, 1 Ti 1!8; c, dat. pers., Mt 41 815 2544 2755, Mk 115,381 1541, Lk 439 88 1237 178, Jo 1226 Ac 6? 1922, Ro 15%5, Phm 8, He 6, 2. to serve as deacon: 1 Ti 3118, 3. C. ace. rei, to minister, swpply, supply by minis- tration: 1 Pe 112 410; pass., 11 Co 33 8!% 20+ SYN.: Xerovpyew, q.v. (Cremer, 179). Stakovia, -as, 7 (<< dudkovos), [in LXX for Ww}, Nw pi.: Es 6% 5 A; t Mac 1158*;] the office and work of a didKovos, service, ministry ; (a) of domestic duties (Field, Notes, 63): Lk 104°; (5) spec. of religious ministration, and the exercise of ministerial functions in the Church: Ac 11725 61s 4 1129 1925 9024 2119 Ro 1118 127 1551, 1 Co 16), 11 Co 4! 68 B4 9418 Eph 4%, Col 47) 1 Ti 13, 0 Ti 45") He 1 Re 2; 8. 7. 108 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Oavarov, 11 Co 37; 7. rvevparos, ib.®; 7. kataxpicews, 7. Suxacoovvys, ib. 9; 7. katadXayijs, ib. 518; 7, Aeroupyias, ib. 92; ¢. obj. gen., riv byuav 4., ib. 119s ph TiC aoaet SidKovos, -ov, 6, 7 (derivation unknown), (in LXX for 3y3, MWY pi.: Es 6% °, »B 11°, 22, Pr 104, 4 Mac 9!7*;] 1. in general, a servant, attendant, minister: Mt 2076 2213 234, Mk 935 1043, Jo 259 1 Co 35, Ga 217, Eph 6?!, Col 47; 6. Geod, Ro 134, 11 Co 64, 1 Th 37; 8. Xpucro, 11 Co 1128, Col 17, 1 Ti 4°; cf. 6 8.6 éuds, Jo 127°; 8. repiropys, Ro 15°; 8. xawys duabyxns, 11 Co 3°; 8. dicatoovvys, U1 Co 111°; 8. [edayyediov], Eph 37, Col 12%; 8. [éxxAyoias], Col 12°, 2. As technical term for Church officer (so in pre-Christian times, v. M, Th., 1, 37), a deacon: Phi 11,1 Ti 3°12; fem. (cf. Eccl. duaxovicca), Ro 16! (cf. 1 Ti 314, and CGT, in 1., also M, Th., 1.c.).t Sywn.: 8do0dos, bondman; Oepdrwv, servant acting voluntarily ; imnpérys, servant, attendant, by etymol. suggesting subordination. All these imply relation to a person, in distinction from which 6. repre- sents rather the servant in relation to his work. Cf. also Aeroupyds, a public servant, in which the idea of service to the community is promi- nent; oixérns, @ house servant. Staxderot, -at, -a, two hundred: Mk 6%", et al. St-axovw, [in LXX: De 1° (yw), Jb 9°35 (a mw hi.)*;] to hear through, hear fully; technically, to hear judicially (as De, l.c.; ef. Deiss., BS, 230): Ac 23%°.+ S.a-kpivw, [in LXX for ppw, J, etc.;] 1. to separate, hence, to distinguish, discriminate, discern: pydev 8., Ac 117; ovdev 8. peragv, Ac 159; ge, 1 Co 47; 16 cpa, 1 Co 11%, 2. to settle, decide, yudge, arbitrate: Mt 163, 1 Co 65 112° (ICC, in 1.), ib. 1 1428, Mid. and pass. ; 1. to get a decision, contend, dispute: seq. pds, Ac 117; c. dat. (but v. ICC, in 1.), Ju; absol., Ju 22'% ms), 2. Hellenistic (NT and Kcel., but not LXX), to be divided in one’s mind, to hesitate, doubt: Mt 21”', Ro 1423, Ja 16; év éavrd, Ja 24; ev r. xapdia, Mk 1173; pndev 6., Ac 107°; 8. 7. duortia, Ro A Sa 22 ee Sid-Kpiots, -ews, 7 (<< diaxpivw), [in LXX for whpn, Jbidi*S* 5] the act of judgment, discernment: Ro 141, 1 Co 12), He 5'4.+ ** Sia-kwdedw, [in LXX: Jth 47 127*;] to hinder, prevent: ec. acc., Mt 314,+ ** §1a-hahéw, -@, [in Sm.: Ps 50(51)!% et al.;] 1. to talk with: xpos, Lk 64, 2. to talk over: pass., Lk 1°.+ Sia-Agyopar (mid. of diareyw, to pick out, distinguish, as depon.), fin LXX: Ex 62, Is 63! (927 pi.), Jg 8! (ax), 1 Es 84, Hs 5?, Si 14%, mt Mac 112°*;] to converse with, discourse (v. Cl. Rev., i, 45), discuss, argue: Ac 184 19% ° 20°; c. dat. pers., Ac 1717 181° 207, He 12°; seq. mpos, Mk 934, Ac 1717 24"; mepi, Ac 24, Ju®; dad +. ypapav, Ac 17?.+ Sia-Aetrw, [in LXX for 5m (as 1 Ki 10), ete. ;] to intermit, leave off for a time: Lk 7*°.t MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 109 Bid-Nextos, -ov, 7 (n0), Mi 712 * | a division: opp. to eipyvy, Lk 12°1,+ Sia-vépw, [in LXX for pon, De 2926 25)*;] to distribute, divide: pass., to be spread about, Ac 417.+ tSa-vedw, [in LXX: Ps 34 (35) (pp), Si 2722*;] to wink at, nod to, beckon to: Lk 12%.+ 110 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Sia-vénpa, -tos, TO (<< diavodopar, to think), [in LXX_ for mawnna, etc., Is 55%, al., freq. in Si;] a thought: Lk 11!.+ Sidvowa, -as, 4, [in LXX chiefly for ao S55 ;] the understanding, mind: Lk 151, Eph 418, Col 121, 1 Pe 113, 11 Pe 31,1 Jo 5%; pl., Eph 23; in quotations from LXX, Mt 22°’, Mk 12°°, Lk 107’, He 81° 1016 (Cremer, 79, 438).t+ St-av-otyw, [in LXX for 7B (Ex, Nu), NPB, MMB, etc. ;] to open up completely, to open: Lk 275 (XX); pass., Mk 734, Ac 758, Metaph., 8. 7. voov, Lk 244, 7. xapdiav, Ac 1614, pass., of 6@fadApoi, Lk 2431; of explaining, r. ypapds, Lk 24%, Ac 173.+ S.a-vuxrepedw (cf. dunwepevo, to pass the day), [in LXX: Jb 2°*;5] to pass the night: seq. ev t. tpocevxyn, Lk 6'*.+ ** §-avdw, [in LXX: mu Mac 12!7*;] 1. to accomplish fully, finish, complete: Ac 217 (EV). 2. In late writers (Xen., al., Clem., I ad Cor., xxv, 3), to continue: Ac, l.c. (Field, Notes, 134 f.).t S.a-rartds, V. dud, C. gen. *t S1a-mrapa-tpiBy, -7s, 7) (<< raparpiBy, friction, irritation), mutual irritation (Field, Notes, 211), wrangling: 1 Ti 6° (Rec. rapadiarpe3y).t Sia-mepdw, -@, [in LXX: De 30", Is 23? (May), 1 Mac,*;] to pass over, cross over: Mt 9!; seq. éwi +. ynv, Mt 1494, Mk 6°; eis, Mk 57), Ac 21?; zpos nuas, Lk 1676.t * $1a-théw, -d, to sail across: Ac 27°.+ Sia-movéw, -@, [in LXX: Ec 10° (ayy ni.), 1 Mac 278; in Aq.: Ge 6°, 1 Ki 208*;] to work owt with labour. Pass., to be worn out, sore troubled: Mk 144 (WH, mg.), Ac 4? 1618,t Sta-mopedw, [in LXX for 7ay, J>5, etc.;] to carry over. Pass., to pass across, journey through: absol., Lk 18%°, Ro 1574; seq. xara modes x. kopas, Lk 13%; dd, c. gen., Mk 2”, Lk 6th (ci. Pee, Wi 31); c. acc., Ac 164.t ** §.-amopéw, -@, [in Sm.: Ps 76(77)°, Da 2'*;] to be quite at a loss, be in great perplexity: absol., Ac 2"; seq. dua 76, ¢. inf., Lk 97; zepi, Ac 524; év éavre, Ac 10!7.+ * $.a-mpaypatevopar, ‘perfective compound” (vy. M, Pr., 118); 1. to examine thoroughly (Plat.). 2. In late writers (Dion. Hal.), to gain by trading: Lk 191°.t S.a-mpiw, [in LXX: 1 Ch 20° (mn) *;] to saw asunder. Pass., metaph. (vernacular ?), EV, cut to the heart: Ac 5°8; seq. 7. xapdias avrav, Ac 754.t Si-aprdtw, [in LXX for 1a, 512, Dow, etc.;] to plunder: Mt 122 Mike Saar Sia-phoow (so WH, exc. Ac, l.c.), dua-ppyoow (poetic and late form of d.appyyvvpe), [in LXX chiefly for y9p ;] to break asunder, burst, rend: Secunda, Lk 82°; pass., décrva, Lk 5°; ivaria, xutovas, in grief or anger (as Ge 372%, al.), Mt 26%, Ac 1414, Mk 14%.+ Sia-capew, -@ ( fig. MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 119 Jo 414 635 737 Re 716 215 2217; c. acc. (= cl. c. gen.), 7. duxaroovvyy, Mt 5°.+ Bios, -eos (-ovs), 7d, (late form of diya), [in LXX chiefly for Nex and cognates ;] thirst: 11 Co 11?7.t *+ BSipuxos, -ov (<< dis, Yvx7), of two minds, wavering: Ja 1° 48 (Cremer, 588; DB, iv, 528).t Siwypds, -0d, 6 (<< ddxw), [in LXX: Pr 111° (F7 pi.), La 319 (TIN), 11 Mac 12?*;] persecution: Mt 1371, Mk 417 10%, Ac 8! 13°°, Ro 8°, n Co 19%) in Th 14, 1 Ti,3™.t *+ Sudkrys, -ov, 6 (<< dudkw), a persecutor: 1 Ti 11%.t Sidkw, [in LXX chiefly for 919;] 1. to put to flight, drive away : Mt 2334, 2. to pursue; (a) of persons; c. acc., without hostility, to follow after: Lk 1723; with hostile purpose: Ac 261, Re 12%. Hence, to persecute: Mt 510-1244 1023, Lk 1149 212, Jo 516 159, Ac 72 94 ® 224578 961415 Ro 1214 1 Co 412 159, m Co 4°, Ga 11528 429 511 612, Phl 36, m Ti 3!2; (6) metaph., c. acc. rei, of seeking eagerly after: Ro 939 1 Ti 64, um Ti 272; vopov duxaootvys, Ro 981; 1. pidrogeriar, Ro 12!3; cipyyvyv, He 1214, 1 Pe 311; +a ris ei., Ro 1419; +, dydrny, 1 Co 14!; 76 dya6év, 1 Th 5!°; absol., to follow on, drive, or speed on (Aisch.), Phl 3% 14.+ Sdypa, -ros, 76 (<< doxew), [in LXX chiefly for MI, oyw 3] l. an opinion. 2. A public decree, ordinance: of Roman rulers, Lk 2, Ac 177; of the Jewish law, Hph 215, Col 214; of the Apostles, Ac 164 (Cremer, 205).t+ t Soyparifw, [in LXX: Hs 3° (and ni.), Da LXX, 21% (xm, M7), 1 Es 634, 1 Mac 108 15%6, mr Mac 4!!*;] to decree. Mid., to subject oneself to an ordinance: Col 2?°,t Soxéw, -@ (<< doxos, opinion, << dexouar, Ion. form of déx-), [in LXX for 319, 273, etc.;] 1. to be of opinion, swppose: Mt 2444, Lk 12%, He 109; c. inf., Mt 39, Lk 818 2487, Jo 53 167, Ac 12°, 2718, 1 Co 318 740 82 1012 1437, Ga 63, Phi 34, Ja 12°; c. ace. et inf., 1 Co 1273, 1 Co 111; seq. an, Mt 6’ 26°%,, Mk 64°, Lk 125) 1974.19" Jo 54° 111%, 3! 1329 2015, 1 Co 49, 11 Co 12!%, Ja 45. 2. to seem, be reputed: Ac 257"; c. inf., Mk 1042, Lk 1036 2274, Ac 1718 269, 1 Co 1116 1272, 11 Co 10°, Ga 2%9 He 4! 121; of Soxotvres, those of repute, Ga 27. Impers., 2 seems, c. dat. pers.; (a) to think: Mt 17%, 1812 2178 217,42 2696, Jo 1156, He 121°; (b) to please, seem good to: c. inf., Lk 1%, Ac 1522) 25, 28, 34 + SYN. (Soxéw 1.): Hyéopar”, vouifw®, olowor; 7. and v. properly express belief resting on external proof, »). denoting the more careful judgment; 8. and of. imply a subjective judgment which in the case of ot. is based on feeling, in 8. on thought (v. Schmidt, c. 17). (soxéw 2.): gaivouar; >., from the standpoint of the object, “expresses how a matter phenomenally shows and presents itself” ; §., from the standpoint of the observer, expresses one’s subjective judgment about a matter (v. Tr., Syn., § lxxx; Cremer, 204). 120 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT BSoxipdtw (<< ddximos), [in LXX chiefly for jna;] 1. primarily of metals (Pr 8!° 173, Si 2°, Wi 3°), to test, try, prove (in the hope and expectation that the test will prove successful, v. reff. s. Syn.): xpvoiov, 1 Pe 17; other things, Lk 12°° 14%, 1 Co 88, Ga 6+, 1 Th 24 571; ra diadépovta, Ro 2}8, Phi 11° (R, mg., but v. infr.); rvevpara, 1 Jo 4!; of men, 1 Ti 3! (pass.); éavrov, 1 Co 1178, 11 Co 13°; seq. subst. clause, Ro 122, 1 Co 318, Eph 5. 2. As the result of trial, to approve, think fit: Ro 128 1422, 1 Co 16%, m Co 8, 1 Th 2% (8edoxipdopefa) ; 7a duadépovra, Ro 2}8, Phil 11, R, txt. (but v. supr.; cf. dapépw).t SYN.: repdlw (v. Tr., Syn., lxxiv; Cremer, 494 ff., 699 ff.). ** Soxipacia, -as, 7 (<(Soximdtw), [in LXX: Si 6)*;] a testing, proving: He 3°@XX).+ **+t Soxipa, -7s, 7 (<< doxipos), [in Sm.: Ps 67 (68)*!*;] 1. the process of trial, proving, test: 11 Co 8? 9!8. 2. The result of trial, approval, approvedness, proof: Ro 54, 11 Co 2° 13%, Phi 2? (Cremer, 212, 701).t Soxipsov, -ov, 7d, [in LXX: Pr 173 277! (Ey) *;] usually regarded as a variant form of Soxipetov, a test, and so perh. Ja 1° (v. Mayor, in ].), but see next word (cf. Cremer, 212, 702).t t+ Boxiptos, -a, -ov (<< doxyun), [in LXX: dpyipov 64. (5*5y), Ps 11 (12)*; and as v.l. for dcxipos (B), apyvpiov 6. (Ppt pu.), I Ch 294 (Bab); ef 8. eorw (12), V fe Wg ta Reon Po A pe Soxipos, tested, approved : 16 8. ipav 7. rictews, that which is approved in your faith, t Pe 17 (where Hort suggests the v.l. d0xij0s, found in some cursives), Ja 13 (but v. Mayor, in]. For full discussion of this word, not hitherto found in a Gk. Lexicon, and for exx. of its use in 7., v. Deiss. (to whom is due the credit of its discovery), BS, 259 ff.; MM, Hzp., xi; ef. also Milligan, NT'D, 76).t Sdxipos, -ov (<< dcxouar = dexouar), [in LXX for ppt pu., ete. 5] primarily of metals, tested, accepted, approved: of persons, Ro 14", 16° 1 Co 1119, m Co 10!8 137, 1 Ti 215, Ja 11? (Cremer, 212, 697).t+ BSoxdés, -od, 7 (Séxona), [in LXX for My), ete.;] a beam of timber: Mt 735, Lk 641: 42 (DCG, i, 176).t SdAtos, -a, -ov (<< dddos), [in LXX—chiefly in Pss, Pr, Si—for maya, etc.;] deceitful: 1 Co 11%*.t t+ Bodidw (<< SdAcos), [in LXX: Nu 2518, Ps 104 (105)25 (553), Ps 5? (pn hi.) *;] to deceive: éSodwwtcay (-cav, freq. in xown Gk. for impf. 3rd pers. pl.), Ro 3)% XX),+ Sédos, -ov, 6, [in LXX chiefly for MA WA;] 1. in Hom., a bait. 2. asnare. 8. Inthe abstract, craft, deceit: Mt 264, Mk 77? 141, Jo 147, Ac 13°, Ro 12%, 1 Co 1236, 1 Th 23, 1 Pe 2!) 22 310(LXX) (AaAjoar 8.).t Soddu, -d (SdAos), [in LKXX: Ps 14 (15)* (639), 35 (36)? (p'9n hi.) * 5] 1. to ensnare. 2. As of wine, to adulterate, corrupt: tr. Aoyov t. Beod, 11 Co 4?.+ SYN.: karndevo, q.V. MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 121 Sdpa, -ros, 7d (<< did), [in LXX for AMA, etc.;] a gift: Mt 74, Lk 1135, Eph 48(@XX), Phi 417.¢ SYN.: ddc1s, ddpov, dwpea, SHpypa. Sdfa, -ys, 7 ( 4,+ SYN.: dom, q- Vv. ** Sdpnpa, Ps be (<< dwpéw), [in LXX: Si 31 oar Dac a gift, boon: Ro 5'6, Ja SYN.: v.s. Su Sapor, -ov, 7d (¥;] an image, likeness: Mt 2279, Mk 1216, Lk 2074, Ro 173, 1 Co 15%, Re 131415 14% 11 152 16? 1929 204; opp. to oxida, He 10'; of man, ¢i. Geod, 1 Co 11’; of the regenerate, «i. 7. Oeot, Col 31° (v. Lft., in 1.); ef. 7. viod r. Oct, Ro 82°, 11 Co 318; of Christ, ei. 7. Oeod, 11 Co 44, Col 11°. SYNW.: épotwpa, denoting resemblance, which may however be merely accidental. i. is a derived likeness and like the head on a coin or the parental likeness in a child, implies an archetype. Cf. also efSos, appearance, not necessarily based on reality; oxi, a shadowed resemblance; xapaxryp, the impress of a stamp; popdy (q.v.), the form as indicative of the inner being. ** ciduxpus, -és, [in LXX: Wi 7°NB*;] wnalloyed, pure (Lat. sincerus ; v. DCG, ii, 635%) ; (a) of unmixed substances ; (0) of abstract ideas ; (c) of ethical purity: Phl 11°, m Pe 31.t SYN.: dyvds (q.v.), xabapos, cf. Tr., Syn., §lxxxv; DB, iv, 176°; Cremer, 378; Westc. on 1 Jo 3°. 132 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT ** ciktxpwvia (Rec., cl., -xpiveia), -as, 7 (<< sary fin LXX: Wi 75 A*:] sincerity, purity: 1 Co 58, 1 Co 1” 2 eltAloow, V.8. EAeoow. eipi, with various uses and significations, like the English verb to be. I. As substantive verb. 1. Of persons and things, to be, exist: Ac 1728, Jo 11 8° 175, al; 6 dv Kai o Ay (for past ptep.), Re 148 48 1117 165 (v. Swete, Ap., 5; M, Pr., 228); 7a (ui) dvra, Ro 417, 1 Co 128, 2. Of times, events, etc., to be, happen, take place: Mt 24%, Mk 142 1542, Lk 2173, Jo 4% 23 610, al. 3. to be present, be in a place, have come: Mt 23315, Mk 145 521 154°, Lk 18 529, Jo 739, al.; seq. eis, Mk 21; seq. é« (éé), Mt 1? 21°, Mk 11%, Jo 3%, al. 4. Impers., eon, jy, etc.; (a) there is (Fr. al y a), was, etc.: Mt 168, Lk 16!°, Jo 3! 5?, Ro gt al.; c. dat. (of the possessor; Bl., § 37, 3), Mt G22 Lk 1’, Jo 181, Ro 92, al. : ; €orw Os, do7ts (chiefly in pl.), Mt 1678 192, “Mk gl, al.; (b) c. inf., = eeorw (q.v.), it is possible: He 9°, 1 Co 1120, RV (but v. ICC, in 1.). II. As copula uniting subject and predicate. 1. Ex- pressing simply identity or equivalence: Mt 51° 1415, Lk 11819 Jo 1} 419 Re 3°, al. mult. 2. Explicative, as in parable, figure, type, etc. : Mt 13!9#, 1 Co 92 104 1125, Ga 474, Re 17%, al.; rotr’ éorw, Mt 2745, Mk 72, Ro 738, al.; 6 éorw, Mk 31", Col 124, He 72, al. ; akin to this is the sacramental usage : Mt 2676 28) Mk 142% 24 Lk 2219 1 Co 11%4 (v. ICC on Mk, 1 Co, ll. c.; DB, iii, 148 f.). 3. C. gen.: qual., etc., Mk 5%, Liki 34 Co 1433, He 1211, al.3) part..1 ti lat meni ps, poss., Mt 5% 10, Mk 127, Lk 47; ‘of service or partisanship, Ro 8°, 1 Co 1}?, 11 Co 107, nm Ti 21°. 4. C. dat. (Bl, §.37;,3) 3 Ac) le 9 Rova err Co 118 a Re 21’,al. 5. C. ptep., as a periphrasis for the simple verb (Bl., § 62, 1, 2; .M, Pr., 225 ff.);.(a) c. ptep: pf. (cl.): Mé 10*°) Lik 92, Jo 374, Ac 2133, 1 Co 1519, al; (b) c. ptcep. pr. (esp. in impf., as in Heb. and Aram.; Dalman, Words, 35f.), Mt 77°, Mk 122, Lk 43! 141, Ac 110, al. mult., id. for imper. (M, Pr., 180 f., 182 f.), with ellipsis of ciyé, Ro 12% 10 He 135, al.; (c) c. ptep. aor. (cl.), Lk 23°. 6. Seq. eis (cf. Heb. 5 mm), a vernac. usage (M, Pr., 71): Mt 195, Mk 108, He 8°, al. 7. C. adv.: Mt 199°, Mk 476, Lk 18", al. 8. Ellipses; (a) of the copula (BL., § 30, 3): Mt gz 2432, Jo 217%) 23, He 64, al.; (6) of the predicate: éyo eiy, Mt 14°’, Mk 659, al.; absol. (cf. De 3239; N17 -"3N), Mk 13°, Jo 4”°, al. (cf. az-, év-, map-, as al ovv-eut). civexev, V.S. evexa. ei-mrep, V.S. ei. etrov, 2 aor. of obsol. pres. érw (cf. Veitch), used as aor. of Aeyu, Q.V. €l-Trws, V.S. €l. eipnvedw (<< eipyvn), [in LXX chiefly for aby, pw ;] 1. to bring to peace, reconcile (so 1 Mac 6°). 2. to keep peace, be at peace: Mk 950, Ro 1218, m1 Co 13", 1 Th 5! (cf. Si 289; Cremer, 246).t+ eipyn, -ns, 7, [in LXX chiefly for ntbyy;] peace; 1. of public peace, freedom from war: Lk 14%”, Ac 127° 24?; of the church, Ac MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 133 931, 2. Of peace between persons, concord, agreement: Mt 1034, Lk 12°, Ro 1417, 1 Co 715, Ga 5%, Ja 318; fnreiv ci., 1 Pe 84; Sudnew, Ti 272; ib. seq. mera wdvrwv, He 1214; by meton., of him who brings peace, Eph 2'4, 3. As in LXX (= Heb. nibyy, Aram. ody), of a state of security and safety: Jo 16°, Ro 21°, 1 Th 5°; whence the formule, traye (ropevov) eis ei., Mk 5°4, Lk 75° (ef. 1 Ki 12, al.; pidyis 125) ; ei, duly (ax pibw), Jo 201% 21,26; Grodvew ev ei., Lk 229, ef. 1 Co 161; 7 ei. tudv, Mt 10% Lk 10°; vids ecipyyys, ib. 4. Of spiritual peace, the peace of Christ’s kingdom (DOCG, ii, 330f.): Lk 179 214, Jo 1683, Ro 2! 5! 85, al.; 6 xvpuos rHs €i., 1 Th 316; 6 Beds rijs ei., Ro 15%? 16°, 11 Co 13", al.; in epistolary salutations, Ro 17,1 Co 1°, Ga 13,1 Th 11,1 Pe 1?, 1 Jo, Re 14, al. (v. Cremer, 244). eipnvixds, -7, -ov (, Ro 5!, 1 Co 108, al.; as subst., Ro 5°, Eph 914; id. c. gen. partit., Mt 5!°, al.; seq. é« (é&), Mk 1418, Jo 68, al.; metaph., of union and concord, Jo 10%? 1711, Ro 125, Phi 127; dao puds (BL, § 44, 1), Lk 1418; c. neg., eis . . . od (49), more emphatic than otdeis, no one, none (cl.), Mt 518 107°, Lk 1146 12°, 2. Emphati- cally, to the exclusion of others; (a) a single (one): Mt 2174, Mk 8*4; absol., 1 Co 94, al.; otdé efs, Mt 274, Jo 13, Ro 3°, al.; (0) one, alone: Mk 27 10!8, Lk 1819; (c) one and the same: Ro 3°, 1 Co 38 115 12", 1 Jo 58. 3. In late Gk., with weakened force, = ms or indef. art. (cf, Heb. "hy, Ge 2218, al.; v. Bl, § 45, 2; M, Pr., 96 f.): Mt 8", 198, Re 83, al.; efs mus (Bl, l.c.), Lk 225°, Jo 11#. 4. Distributively: es éxaoros (cl.), Lk 44°, Ac 2°, al.; eis . . . wai els (cl., eis ev . . . ets 8€), Mt 174, Mk 95, Jo 202, al. (cf. LXX and use of Heb. my, Ex 17®, al.); 6 els . . . 6 repos (dAXos) = Cl. 6 pev (Erepos) . . . 0 O€ (Erepos), Mt 624, Lk 741, Re 1719; xa els, eis x. ets (in which xa@’ is adverbial, or the expression formed from the analogy of é xa? &; M, Pr., 105), one by one, severally: Mk 14°, Ro 12°, al.; ets rov €va = ddAyAous (BL, § 45, 2; M, Pr., 246), 1 Th 5", 5. As ordinal = zpdéros (like Heb. ox; Bl, § 45,1; M, Pr., 95 f.), first: Mt 28', Mk 16’, al. eio-dyw, [in LXX chiefly for Nia hi.;] to bring in: c.ace., Lk 227, Jo 1816, Ac 745; seq. eis, Lk 2254, Ac 98 217% 2% 37 2994, He 16; ade, Lk 142!.+ eig-axotw, [in LXX chiefly for yow, also for M3, etc.;] to listen to, in two senses; (a) to obey: 1 Co 14”! (cf. De 1%, Si 3%); (6) to listen, assent to ; pass., to be heard: of persons praying, Mt 6’, He 5’; of the prayer offered, Lk 11%, Ac 10*! (cf. Ps 4%, Si 31(84)?9(26); v. Cremer, 624).t eio-S€xopat, [in LXX for pap;] to admit, recewe: mu Co 617 @XX) (Cremer, 687).+ elo-eyst, [in LXX for Ni2;] to go in, enter: seq. eis, Ac 35 216, He 9°; xpos IdxwBov, Ac 21'8.+ eio-€pxopat, [in LXX chiefly for Nia;] to go i or ito, enter: Mt 925, Lk 745, al.; seq. eis, Mt 10!, Mk 21, al.; seq. dua (x vAns, Bupas, etc.), Mt 713, Jo 10!, al.; imo +. oréynv, Mt 88; c. adv.: orov, Mk 14!4, He 62°; dde, Mt 2212; Zow, Mt 2658; seq. zpos, c. ace. pers., Mk 154%, Lk 178, Ac 103 113 164° 172 288, Re 32°; of demons taking possession, Mk 975, Lk 80 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 135 228, Jo 137; of food, Mt 15, Ac 118. Metaph., of thoughts, Lk 946; eis xorrov, JO 438; cis repacpov, Mt 2641, Lk 22446; of hope as an anchor, He 6!; Boai, Ja 5*; rvetpa Cwis, Re 111!; eis +. xécpov (cf. Wi 274 1414, Jo 183”), Ro 5%, He 105; in counterparts of Jewish Aram. phrases relating to the theocracy (cf. Dalman, Words, 116 ff.): eis r. yapous, Mt 251°; cis 7. xdpay 7. Kupiov, Mt 2571123; cis 7. Cwyv, Mt 18% 9 1917, Mk 94345; eis r, BacwW. Tr. ovpavadv (7. Oeod), Mt 52° 771, al. (v.s. Baotreia); cis tr. katdravow, He 31418 41%: cig 7, ddfav, Lk 247; cic. at é£epx., to go in and out (like Heb. nN¥} NiI2, De 285, etc.), of familiar intercourse, Ac 171; fig., of moral freedom, Jo 10° (cf. éx-, rap-, ow- evoépxop.ar). * cio-kahéw, -@, to call in: mid., c. acc. pers., Ac 10?3.+ eig-od0s, -ov, o (<< 680s), [in LXX chiefly for Nia;] 1. a means of entering, place of entrance: He 109, 11 Pe 11! (cf. Westc., He., l.c.; MM, Exp., xii; but v. infr.). 2. a going in, entrance: Ac 134; c. gen. loc., He 10" (Thayer, s.v.; but v. supr.) ; seq. eis, 11 Pe 11! (Mayor, in 1.; Thayer; but v. supr.); zpos, 1 Th 1° 21.+ eio-mnSdw, -o, [in LXX: Am 59 (N52), Da TH Su 26*;] to spring in, rush in: Ac 1414 (Ree), 162% (for exx. from z., v. MM, Ezp., xii).t eito-mopevopat, [in LXX chiefly for Ni13;] to go into, enter: Lk 816 1183 1980; seq. eis, Mk 171 656 11?, Lk 221°, Ac 32; zpos, c. acc. pers., Ac 28°; drov, Mk 5*; xara +r. oixous, house after house, Ac 8°; of things (food), Mt 15!’, Mk 7151519. Metaph. (ef. eicépyouar, 2), Mk 41°, Lk 184; cic. xai éxrop., to associate with, seq. pera (cf. eixepyopan), Ac 978,+ ** cig-tpéxw, [in LXX: 1 Mac 5°6*;] to run in: Ac 12}4.+ eio-pépw, [in LXX chiefly for Nia hi.;] to bring in, into: c. ace. pers., Lk 5'*19; seq. eis, Mt 6!8, Lk 114; eri, Lk 12"; c. acc. rei, seq. eis, I Ti 67; pass., He 1311.+ eita, adv., denoting sequence; 1. of time; then, next: Mk 8, Lk 812, Jo 13° 1927 2027, 1 Ti 3!°, Ja 115; seq. gen. abs., Mk 417; in enumerations, I Co 15% 74,1 Ti 218, 2. In argument; (a) therefore, then; (b) furthermore: He 129 (cf. etrev).t elte, V.S. «i. * eirev, Ion. and Hellenistic for efra (q.v.), then: Mk 4°8.+ elwOa, v.S. Ow. éx (é), prep. c. gen., from out of, from (see Addendum, p. 492). éxaotos, -y, -ov, [in LXX chiefly for wen;] each, every (Lat. quisque); (a) with a noun: Lk 6*, Jo 198; seq. card, He 318, Re 22?; eis €, Eph 416; (6) without a noun: Ac 4%, Ro 28, al.; (c) partit. gen., Ro 14!2,1 Co 11%, al.; in sing. with pl. verb, Lk 23, Ac 112°, al.; in apposition with pl. noun or pron., Lk 23, Jo 1632, Ac 28 376, al.; fs €. (Lat. wnusquisque), Ac 2° 21°, Col 4°, al.; 2. 7. ddeAda (= Heb. rnxd wx, Ge 26%), Mt 18% (cf. He 84); 2 pera rod rAnovov (= anyy>y wen, Jg 6%, al.), Eph 425, * éxdotote, adv., each time, always: 11 Pe 115,+ 136 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT éxatév, of, ai, rd, indecl., a hundred: Mt 1353, Lk 154, al.; xara é., Mk 6%; eis, ev €., Mk 4% 70, éxatovtaerms (Rec. -érys), -és (y), Elizabeth: Lk 15*.+ éeos, -ovs, 7d (cl. -ov, 6, and so Rec., Mt 913 127 2328, Tit 35, He 416; on the Hellenistic form 76 é., v. WH, App., 158; M, Pr., 60; Mayser, 277; Kihner, i, 515), [in LXX chiefly for 191;] mercy, pity, compassion ; 1. of men : Mt 918(/XX) 197 235 ; zouety é. (and id. seq. perd, ce. gen.; cf. Heb. oy 19n My, Ge 21%, al.), Lk 107, Ja 218 317, 2, Of God: Lk 15° 54,58, Ro 159, Hph 24, 1 Ti 116 18 Tit 35, He 416 1 Pe 1%; esp. in benedictions, Ga 6'°,1 Ti 1*, 1 Ti 1°, mJo%, Ju?; orev ééous, Ro 978; omAdyxva éAéous, Lk 1°8; woveiv &. (v. supr.), Lk 172; +, tpuerépw eee, Ro 114. 3. Of Christ: Ju2.t SYN.: oixtippds (v.8. éheew), édevOepia, -as, 7, [in LXX: Le 19° (nw), 1 Es 4% 8, Si 72 3034 (3375), 1 Mac 14’, mr Mac 378*;) liberty: with reference to the religious life, 1 Co 109, 11 Co 31’, Ga 24 51, 1 Pe 2'6, 11 Pe 2!9; 6 vopos mys é., Ja 17° 22; y é. ras Soéys, Ro 8%; ex’ é., Ga 5!8 (on which formula, cf. Deiss., LAE, 327 ff.; Cremer, 251).+ édevPepos, -a, -ov, [in LXX chiefly for "wEn;] free; (a) in civil sense, not a slave: Jo 8°3, 1 Co 722 1218, Ga 328, Eph 68, Col 3", Re 61 1316 1918; fem., Ga 422,23, 30; (5) as regards restraint and obligation in general: Mt 1776, 1 Co 9!; seq. éx, 1 Co 91%; dad, Ro 73; c. inf., 1 Co 73°; from the law, Ga 47°, 1 Pe 2!6; from sin, Jo 8%; rp dixavootvy, as regards righteousness, Ro 62° (Cremer, 249).t+ €hevOepdw, -&, [in LXX: Pr 251°, 1 Mac 177 222*;)] to make free : 10 146 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT from sin, Jo 83% 36; geq. dd, Ro 618 22 8% 21; 7. édevbepia (dat. commodi), Ga 5! (on the “ punctiliar” force of this verb, v. M, Pr. 149; cf. also Cremer, 251).+ *t €Xeuvats, -ews, 7, a coming: Ac 752.+ ehepdvtivos, -7, -ov (<< eA€égas, wory), [in LXX for w;] of wory: Re 18!2.+ "EXtaxe(p (Heb. o975N), Hliakim, an ancestor of Jesus: Mt 13, Lk 3°°.+ * Qtypa, -ros, 76 (<éAioow), a roll: Jo 19°, WH, txt. (uiypa, Ree. ; piypa, WH, mg., R, txt.).t "EdtéLep (Heb. 4375N), 6, indecl., Eliezer, an ancestor of Jesus: Lk 3?9.+ ’Eduovd, 6, indecl., Hliwd, an ancestor of Jesus: Mt 14 15,+ ’EduodBer, v.s. EXeo-. ’EXtoatos (Rec. EAwwoaios ; T, “Edw-), -ov, 6 (Heb. yurdy), Elisha, the prophet: Lk 4?7.t éXioow, [in LXX: Is 344 (552 ni.), Ps 101 (102)*6 (95m hi.), ete. ;] to roll, roll up: He 142%), Re 614.t éXkos, -cos (-ovs), 76 [in LXX: Ex 9°", Le 131827, rv Ki 207, Jb 27 (prw);] 1. a wound (Hom.). 2. a sore, an ulcer (Thuc., al.): Lk 162!, Re 16%) 11.+ * &Xxdw, -6; 1. to wound. 2. to ulcerate; pass., to suffer from sores: pf. ptep., eiAxwpevos (Rec. 7Ax-), EV, full of sores, Lk 16?°.t €X\kUw, V.S. EAKw. €\xw, (Hellenistic form éAxvw in Jo, ll. ¢., Ac 161%), [in LXX for Jw, etc.;] to draw: c. acc. rei, Jo 18!° 21°; c. acc. pers., seq. é£w, Ac 21%9; eis, Ac 1619, Ja 26. Metaph., to draw, lead, impel: Jo 644, 1232, (For discussion of €. in Oxyrh. Log., v. Deiss., LAE, 437 ff.)t “EANds, -ddos, 7, [in LXX: Is 661%, Kz 2713 (7m), 1 Mac 1! 8°*;] with varying usage as to geographical limits; in NT = ’Ayaia (ef. Ac 18!”), Greece: Ac 20?.+ "EAAny, -nvos, 6, [in LXX: Jl 3(4)%, Za 98 (7p), ete.; 1 Mac 1”, al.*;] a Greek; opp. to BapBapos, Ro 1'*; usually in NT of Greek Gentiles, opp. to “Iovdato.: Jo 79°, Ac 117° 141 164) 3 184 191% 17 2021 9128, FR 116,99: 10) SP ir Gores 72% 108 Gah eee Clare aoe proselytes, Jo 12°, Ac 174.t ‘EdAnvikds, -7, -ov, [in LXX: Je 26 (46)!® 27 (50)!* (37: aliter in Heb.), 11 Mac 41% 15 69 1124 132, 1v Mac 8°*;] Greek: +. “EAAnnKy (sc. yAwooy), Re 911.t **EAnvis, -idvs, 7, [in LXX: 1 Mac 68A*;] a Greek (i.e. Gentile) woman: Mk 726, Ac 17}2.+ ¥t‘EXAnnams, -00, 6 (); (a) to be moved with anger (cf. éuBpipnua, La 2°): c. dat., Mk 145, Jo 11°8; év éavrd, Jo 118; (b) to admonish sternly: c. dat., Mt 9°°, Mk 143.+ épéw, -6, [in LXX: Is 19! (N1p)*;] to vomit: fig., Re 316+ *t éu-uatvona, depon., to rage against: ¢. dat., Ac 26'1.t t+’Eppavound, 5 (Heb. 5x apy, Is 74), Immanuel: Mt 123 @XX),+ ae aces », Emmaus, a place 60 furlongs from Jerusalem: Lk 413, éppeévw, [in LXX chiefly for 03);] 1. to abide in: Ac 28°, 2. to abide by, be true to: seq. ev; t. mista, Ac 1477; 7. diabyxy, He 89 (LXX); ¢. dat., 7. yeypaupeévors (dat. ptep. as in legal formula; cf. Deiss., BS, 248; MM, Hap., xii): Ga 310 (XX) + ‘Eppap (T, Eupwp, Rec. -dp, indecl. (Heb. 14m), Hmmor (Ge So.) ACen éuds, -7, -dv, poss. pron. of first pers., representing the em- phasized gen. éuod, mine, subjectively and objectively, ie. belonging to, proceeding from or related to me: Mt 18%, Mk 8°8, Jo 37° (most freq. in this gospel), al.; absol., ro éuov, ra ep, Mt A097", Tak 15%, Jo 104 16%4s25 a7 gen. obj. (cl.), eis T. €miyv dvapvyow, Lk 9919 1 Co 117425; ¢, gen. expl., 7. €un xeupt ILavAov, I Co 167!, Col 4s, wm Th 3". ¥t €umatypovn, -75, 7 (<< eurrailw, q.v.), mockery: um Pe 33.t + ép-matypds, -ot, 6 (< eumailw, q.v.), [in LXX: Hz 224 (m5), Ps MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 149 37 (38)’ Bx! (mdp ni.), Wi 1225, Si 2728, 11 Mac 77, mt Mac 5%*:] a mocking: He 11%6.+ ép-maifw, [in LXX for bby hithp., pn, etc.;] = Attic zpoc-, katarailw, to mock at, mock (Hadt.): c. dat., Mt 272% 31, Mk 1520, Lk 149 2263 2336; pass., Mt 216, Lk 1882; absol., Mt 2019 2741, Mk 10% 1531, Lk 2311.+ t éu-maixtys, -ov, 6 (<< euraifw, q.v.), [in LXX: Is 34 (ardadyn) * 5] amocker: 1 Pe 33, Ju48.+ ép-tepi-Tatéw, -@, V.S. év7-. éu-mimAnpe (On ewrium-, v. LS, s.v., Bl., § 6, 8), and éurmddw (Ac 1417), [in LXX chiefly for Nba, yaiz;] to fill full, fill wp, satisfy: e. acc. pers. et gen. rei, Lk 1°°, Ac 141"; pass., Lk 6%, Jo 6; metaph., c. gen. pers., to take one’s fill of : Ro 15*4 (ef. Da LXX Su 3?),+ ép-twimpnpt, €urp70w (for the form, v.s. éumixAnp, and cf. Veitch, 8.v. mipmpypt), [in LXX chiefly for F7w;] to set on fire: rodw, Mt 227; pass., of the body, to become inflamed: Ac 28° (T; miurpnmn, WH, q.v.).t ép-wintw, [in LXX chiefly for 5p3;] to fall into: seq. eis, Mt 124, Lk 6% 10%°; metaph., eis xpiua, I Ti 36; dvedurpdv, ib. 37; mepacpov, ib.\69; eis xetpas Oeod (cf. 1 Ki 2444.1 Ch 2118, Si 2!8), He 10*1.+ éu-whékw, [in LXX: Pr 2818 (553), u Mac 15!7*;] to weave in, entwine; pass., metaph., to be involved, entangled in: u Ti 24, m Pe 2?°,+ *t éu-mhoKy, -7s, 7 (<< eurdexw), a braiding: rprxdv, 1 Pe 3%.t éu-tvéw, -@, V.S. év7-. éu-mopevopar, depon. (< éuropos), [in LXX chiefly for 3mp;] 1. to travel, esp. for business. 2. to traffic, trade: Ja 43, 3. C. acc. rei (a) to traffic in; (b) to import: (Ho 12}, for 5a» hoph.). 4. C. acc. pers., to make a gain of: m Pe 23.t épmopia, -as, 7 (<éumopos), [in LXX for mo, 555, etc.;] commerce, business, trade: Mt 225.+ éumdpiov, -ov, 76 (€uzopos), [in LXX: De 33!* (jp), Ez 273 (59); é. elvar, Is 2317 (m31)*;] a trading-place, exchange: otxos éurropiov, Jo 216 + éu-mopos, -ov, 6 (<(rdpos, a jowrney), [in LXX chiefly for sno, 555;] 1. a passenger on shipboard, one onajourney. 2. a merchant : Mt 1345, Re 18% 11,15, 23 + éu-mpyOw, V.S. €umirpyye. €u-mpoober, adv. of place (in cl. also of time), [in LXX chiefly for 13D 3] 1. adverbially, before, in front: Lk 19°8; eis 76 é., ib. 4; opp. to émurbev, Re 4°; opp. to ra dricw, ta 2, Phi 34%, 2. As prep., before; (a) in front of: Mt 574 6? 76 111° 2729, Lk 5!9 727 142, Jo 328 104, Re 191° 228; (b) in the presence of: Mt 2711, Ga 214.1 Th 1% Q!9 39,13, époroyev, dpvetcac (Dalman, Words, 210), Mt 10% 33 267, Lk 128; in forensic sense, Mt 25%? 2711, Lk 2136, Ac 1817, 11 Co 51°, 1 Th 219 1 Jo 150 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 319; ebdoxla (éAnua) éore é. Geod (a targumic formula; Dalman, Words, 911), Mt 1126 181+, Lk 10%; (c) im the sight of: Mt 5° 6! 172 23%, Mk 2!2 92, Lk 1927, Jo 1287, Ac 104; (d) of rank and dignity (Dem., Plat.) al; eX XGe 487°): Jo 12520 éu-mtdw, [in LXX: seq. eis, Nu 124 A, De 25° (p)*;] =cl., xatartiw (Ruth., NPhr., 66), to spit wpon: ec. dat., Mk 10%4 14% 159; seq. eis, Mt 26° 273°. Pass., Lk 18%?.+ epdarys, -és (<< eupaivw, to show in, exhibit), [in LXX: Mi 4}, Is 2? (713 ni.), Wi 6” 77! 1417; é yiveoOar, Ex 2" (yt ni.), Is 65! (wat ni.) *;] manifest: Ac 10*°; metaph., Ro 10°° ©XX) (v.s, émuparys).t énpavitw, [in LXX for ym hi., etc.;] 1. to manifest, exhibit : éavtév, c. dat pers., Jo 147122 (DCG, ii, 112b). Pass. and mid., to show oneself, appear: Mt 27°°, He 94 (cf. MM, Hap., xii). 2. to declare, make known: seq. ért, He 111*; c. dat. pers., Ac 23°; ¢ ace. rei, seq. mpds, Ac 232; xard, c. gen. pers., Ac 24! 257; epi, Ac 2515.+ SYN.: dydow, q.v. ** éu-poBos, [in LXX: Si 1974, 1 Mac 13?*;] 1. terrible. 2. in fear (of Godly fear, Si, l.c.), terrified: Lk 24° 87, Ac 104 2475, Re 1115.+ ép-puade, -0 (<< dvodw, to blow), [in LXX for mB3, ete. ;] to breathe into (cf. Ge 27, Wi 151, al.), breathe upon: Jo 20?2.t ** éu-utos, -ov (<< éudiw, to implant), [in LXX: € 7 xaxia atréar, Wi 121°*;] 1. innate (Wi, l.c.). 2. rooted, implanted: Ja 121 (v. Mayor, in 1.).t+ év, prep. (the most freq. of all in NT), c. dat. (= Heb. 3, Lat. in, c. abl.). I. Of place, ¢. dat. rei, pers., in, within, on, at, by, among : év t. wode, Lk 737; 7. 6fOadpo, Mt 7°; 7. xowrla, Mt 124°; 7. dpe, mt Pe 138; +. Opovw, Re 374; 7. deéia 7. Oeod, Ro 874; & tyiv, Lk 1}; of books, év r. BiBdrto, Ga 3”; 7. vow, Mt 12°, al.; ev rots +. Ilatpos pov, in my Father's house (RV; ef. M, Pr., 103), Lk 24°; trop., of the region of thought or feeling, év 7. xapdia (-as), Mt 55, 1 Co 4%, al. ; rT. cuvedyceswv, 1 Co 5"; after verbs of motion, instead of eis (con- structio pregnans, a usage extended in late Gk. beyond the limits observed in cl.; cf. Bl., § 41, 1; M, Th. 12), droordd\yw . . . &, Mt 10%; ddwxey ev tr. xeupi (cf. rHévar ev xepo’, Hom., II., i, 441, al.), Jo 3*°; id. after verbs of coming and going (not in cl.), eiojAbe, Lk 916; ééfrAOev, Lk 7”. II. Of state, condition, form, occupation, ete. : ev Lown, Ro 5; & 1. Oavdtw, I Jo 34; &v wepacpois, I Pe 1°; év eipyry, Mk 5%; éy d0&, Phl 4%; & mpairynn, Ja 3%; & prorypiw, I Co 2°; ev rt. dwayn, Mk 4?; of a part as contained in a whole, év 7. durédw, Jo 154; & é&%i cépart, Ro 124; of accompanying objects or persons (simple dat. in cl.), with, ev aiwarr, He 9%; év déka yuArdow, Lk 14%! (cf. Jul, Ac 7!4); similarly (cl.), of clothing, armour, arms, év aroAats, Mk 12°8; é éoOjr Aaprpa, Ja 27; ev payxaipy, Lk 224°; é paBdw, 1 Co 421 (cf. é rogos, Xen., Mem., 3, 9, 2); of manner (cl.), é& tdye (= raxéws), Lk 188 (cf. Bl., § 41, 1); of spiritual influence, év rvevparu, Ro 8°; ev 7. dxaddprw, Mk 1%; of the mystical relation of the Christian life and the believer himself, to God and Christ (cf. ICC, Ro., 160 f. ; MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 151 Mayor on Ju!; M, Pr., 103): év Xpiord (‘Incod), & xvpiw, Ro 3% 64, 1 Co 3! 41 Co 122, Ga 217, Eph 67, Col 47,1 Th 416, al. III. Of the agent, instrument or means (an extension of cl. & of instr.—yv. LS, S.v. I1I—corresponding to similar use of Heb. 3), by, with: & ipiv Kpiverat 6 koopos (= cl. rapa, c. dat.), 1 Co 62; & Tr. dpyovte 7. Saipoviwr, Mt 9%4; éy aivarr, He 9%; & toa, Mt 34, al.; ev paxatpa aoxrevel (cf. the absol. é& p., év p¢8do, supr., II, which some would classify here), Re 131° (cf. 68). Allied to this usage and distinctly Semitic are the following: wyépacas . . . év T. aipate oov (cf. BDB, s.v. 2, m1, 3), Re 5°; épmoAoyeiv ev (= Aram. 2 IN; cf. McNeile on Mt, l.c.; M, Pr., 104), Mt 10%, Lk 128; dpuwva ev (= cl. acc., so Ja 5”), Mt 5%, al. ; also at the rate of, amounting to, Mk 48 (WH; wv. Ill., «is, ev), Ac 74 (LXX), TV. Of time, (a) im or during a period: év r. iyepa (vuxré), Jo 11°, al.; & caBBarw, Mt 127, al.; & 7d peraéd, meanwhile, Jo 431; (6) at the time of an event: év 7. rapovoia, 1 Co 15°; & 7. dvacrdce, Mt 22% ; (c) c. art. inf., (a) pres. (so sometimes in cl., but not as in NT = éus; v. M, Pr., 215), while: Mt 134, Mk 648, Ga 4)8, al.; (8) aor., when, after: Lk 936, al. : (d) within (cl.) : Mt 27,’ V. In composition : (i) meaning: (a) with adjective Ss, it signifies usually the possession of a quality, as évddwos, évdogos; (b) with verbs, continuance in (seq. év) or motion into (seq. eis), as éupévw, éuBaivw. (ii) Assimilation: ev becomes éu- before B, p, 7, , w; ey- before y, x, €&, x; eA- before A. But in the older MSS of NT, followed by modern editions, assimilation is some- times neglected, as in evypdda, evxavifw, ete. 1 év-aykahiLopat (<< dyxuAn), on for pan pi., Pr:6!0 2448 (88) * 5) to take into one’s arms: Mk 9°° 10! * év-dXuos, -ov (also -a, -ov; < one dhs sea), of the sea: 7a €., marine creatures, Ja 37.t tév-avr, adv., a xowy word (MM, Hap., xii), before; as prep., c. gen.: Lk 18, Ac 7}° (WH, ¢vavriov), 8?!.+ év-avtios, -a, -ov (, etc., cf. Dalman, Words, 31 f., 209f., and Deiss., BS., 213], in NT, most freq. in Lk, Ac, Re, never in Mt, Mk, before, in the presence of: Lk 11° 4%, Ac 4% 6°, Re 14 2'4, al.; esp. é. Kupéov (Geot), in the sight of God, or with God as witness or as judge, Ro 14%, 1 Co 1%, 1 Ti 2°, Ja 41, 1 Pe Sorat *Evds (Heb. way), 6, Enos (Ge 4*°): Lk 3°8.t t évwtifopar (<< ots), depon. mid., an LXX chiefly for fix hi.;] to give ear to, hearken to: ce. acc., Ac 2 "Evdéx (Heb. F137), 6, Hnoch a on ks!) He 115) Ja st é€, V.S. €k. €§, of, al, ta, indecl., siz: Mt 171, Lk 18%, al. ét-ayyeAho, [in LXX chiefly for "BD pi.;] to tell owt, proclaim. I Pe 2° [Mk 16, “shorter conclusion ”’] (Cremer, 29).+ t €-ayopdtw, [in LXX: Karpov tpeis é€ayopd€ere (727), Da LXX TH 28*;] 1. to redeem, ransom (esp. of slaves): metaph., Ga 3 4°, 2. to buy wp; mid., to buy up for oneself: +. Karpov, Eph 51, Col 4° (Cremer, 60).t+ e€-dyw, [in LXX chiefly for Ny? hi.;] to lead owt: c. acc., Mk 1520) Jo 108 Ac 51758 168% 292 seq. éfosluk 240 sex Aen iMate Aue He 89; éis, Ac 2188+ éf-aipéw -@, [in LXX chiefly for 5y3 hi.;] to take owt: c. acc., dpbarpor, ) Mt 5” 18°; mid. (a) to take owt for oneself, choose: Ac 2617 (Thayer, s.v.; Page, Ac., l.c., but v. infr.); (b) to deliver: Ac OY 82 XX) 12" 2327 261" (EV, but v. supr.), Ga 1*+ éé-aipw, [in LXX for yo3, wa hi. MAD ni., WO, WA pi., etc. ;] to lift wp, lift off the earth, remove : 1 Co 618 @XX) + * ét-aitéw, -0, to ask from; mid., to ask for oneself, demand: aor., eéntycato, c. acc. (obtained you by asking, R, mg.), Lk 22%" (vy. Field, Notes, 76; Cremer, 73).t+ éé-aidvns (WH, éfépvys, exc. Ac 22°; v. App., p. 151, and ef. M, Pr., 35), adv. (): Lk 5*:4; intrans., to return: Mt 2118.+ * év-ava-pipvnokw, to remind again: c. acc. pers., Ro 1515.+ én-ava-radvw, [in LXX, mid., for M13, yyw ni.;]| to refresh, cause to rest (upon); mid., to rest upon: metaph., c. dat., Ro 217; seq. émi, c. acc., Lk 106 (Cremer, 827).t én-av-épxopat, [in LXX for aw, etc.;] to return: Lk 10% ORES éx-ov-tommpt, [In LXX chiefly for 51);] to raise wp against ; mid., to rise wp against: seq. emi, c. acc. pers., Mt 1074, Mk 13!2.+ ** ér-av-dp0wats, -ews, 7) (<< eravopOdw, to correct, restore; cf. 1 Mac 222), [in LXX: 1 Hs 8°, 1 Mac 14%4*;] correction: of life, 1 Ti 316 (cf. MM, Exp., xiv).t ér-dvw, adv., [in LXX for m>yn , By) OMA wete: 3] above ; 1. adverbially ; (a) of place: Lk 1144; (6) of number, more than: Mk 145,1Co15®, 2. As prep. c. gen.; (a) of place: Mt 29 514 217 2318, 20, 22 2737 287, Lk 43° 1019, Re 6° 20%; (0) of pre-eminence: Lk 191719, Jo 331+ *én-dpatos, -ov (<érapdopa, to imprecate), accursed: Jo 74° (for exx. from 7., v. MM, Hap., xiv; cf. Cremer, 108).t+ ** ér-apkéw, -@, [in LXX: 1 Mac 876 115°*;) 1. to be strong enough for. 2. to ward off. 3. to aid, relieve: c. dat. pers., 1 Ti 51% 16 (mid., WH, mg.).t t éwapxeia (Rec. -xia, v. Bl, § 3, 5), -as, ) (<< erapyos, a prefect), [in LXX: Hs 4! (mp9), Jth 3°A*;] the jurisdiction of a prefect, a province: Ac 23%4 251.+ *t émdpyxetos, -ov, of a prefect: 7 é. (sc. efovoia) = érapxeia, q.v., Ac 25! (WH, mg.).t MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 165 ém-audts, -ews, 7 ( © (WE, me.) rperop,.).,. .€. (bis);1 Co, L257 ém-ékewa, adv. (= ér exeiva), [in LXX: Le 2277, Nu 329, al. (nxbz), etc.;] beyond; c. gen., Ac 743 @XX), + *én-ex-tetvw, to extend; mid., to stretch forward: c. dat., Ph] 313,+ ; 166 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT érevduTns, -ov, 6 (<< érevdvw), [in LXX for Syn, Le 87 A (Aq. érévdupa), I Ki 184 A, m Ki 13!8*;] an owter tunic (RV, coat): Jo 217.+ tH dxceveblue. Ove (Hdt.), to put on oie pass. (Plut., al.), to have on over, be clothed upon: 1 Co 5% 4, én-€pxouar, [in LXX for Nin, Tay, be 3] 1. to come to, arrive, come on: seq. azo, c. gen. loc., Ac 141° (érydOav; cf. M, Pr., 65; Deiss., BS, 191); of time, Eph 27. 2. to come upon (as in Hom. ): of calamities! Lk 2126, Ac 874 134°, Ja 5!; of an enemy, Lk 1122; of the Holy Spirit, Lk 155, Ac 18, [in LXX: yéyvomar eri, Jg 146, 1 Ki 116, al.].t én-epwtdo, -3, [in LXX chiefly for 5xwy, also for w7, etc. ;] to in- quire of, consult, question: c. acc. pers., Mk 124, Lk 246, al.; c. dupl. acc., Mk 717 1129, Lk 20%, al.; c. acc. pers., seq. A¢€ywv, Mt 1218, Mk 91! ; ei, Mk 878, Lk 23%, al.; é. Qeov, Ro 1079@XX), 2. In late Gk., to beg of, demand of: c. acc. pers. et inf., Mt 161 (cf. gpwraw; and v. Cremer, 716). ** é-epdtnpa, -ros, 76, [in LXX: Da TH 414 (Nbxw), Si 36 (33)3 * 3] 1. a question, an inquiry (Hdt., Thuc.). 2. a demand: 1 Pe 3?! (vy. ICG; an V.).t én-éxw, [in LXX for 51m, etc.; also Si 8! 31 (34)?, 11 Mac 525 9%, al.;] 1. to hold upon. 2. Like zapéyw (as in Hom., al.), to hold out, offer: oyov Cwys, Phl 21°. 3. to hold or direct towards, sc. vovv; (a) absol., to intend, purpose ; (b) to observe, give attention to (v. MM, Exp., xiv): seq. was, Lk 147; c. dat. pers., Ac 3°, 1 Ti 416, 4. to stay, DES Ae o224(in legal phrase, MM, Hap., l.c.).t+ *énnpedlo (< érjpea, spiteful abuse), to revile: c. acc. pers., 620% e. ace. rei (but v. ICC, in 1.), 1 Pe 3°6.t eri (before a smooth breathing éz’, before a rough breathing e¢’), prep. c. gen., dat., acc. (acc. most freq. in NT), with primary sense of superposition, on, upon. I. C. gen., 1. of place, answering the question, where? (a) of the place on which, on, upon: émi (r.) yijs, Mt 61% 19) al.; 7. xepadrs, I Co 1119; 7. vebedav, Mt 24°9 al.; like év, in constr. pregn. after verbs of motion: BadAav, Mk 476; o7edpew, ib. *!; épxerOar, He 67, al.; fig., em’ addnOeias (MM, s.v. a.); of the subject of thought or speech, Ga 31°; of power or authority, over, ravtwy, Ro 9°: t. yatys, Ac 87; éfovaia eri, Re 276 20°; (b) of vicinity, at, by: + Gadracons, Jo 69; 7. 603, Mt 211°; rod Barov, Mk 1276 (vy. Swete, in 1.) ; c. gen. pers., in the presence of, before, Mt 284, Ac 23°, 1 Co 61, al. 2. Of time, (a) c. gen. pers., in the time of: emi EXwoaiov, Lk 477; eri KXavdiov, Ac 118; eri “ABidbap apyuepews, when A. was high priest, Mk 2°6; (b) c. gen. rei, at, at the time of: Mt 1", He 1?, 1 Pe 33; emi T. Tpowevxov prov (nuav), Ro 1°, Eph 16, 1 Th 17, Phm#. II. C. dat., of place, answering the question, where? (a) lit., on, wpon: Mt 9", 148, al.; after verbs of motion (v. supr., 1, 1, (a)), Mt 9!© Ac 816; above, Lk 23°8; at, by, Mk 13°, Jo 5?, Ac 5°, al. : (6) metaph., wpon, on the ground of, Lk 44 (LXX); im the matter of, Mk 6% (v. Swete, i in 1.); wpon, of, concerning, Ac 535 40; of the ground, reason or motive (B1., § P38 2; 43, 3), Mt 183 199, Ro 12") al.; ep’ &, for the reason that, MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 167 because, Ro 5", 1 Co 54; after verbs of motion, over, Mt 183, Ro 1619, al.; of a condition (cl.), Ro 8,1 Co 91; emi dvi wdprvow (v. Weste. on He 91°), He 108; of purpose or aim, Eph 21°, Phi 4”; of authority, over, Mt 244’, Lk 1244; of hostility, c. dat. pers. (cl.), against, Lk 12°; in addition to (cl.), 1 Co 78; of an adjunct, in, at, on, Phl 13217, ITT. C. ace., 1. of place of motion upon or over, answering the question, whither? (a) lit., wpon, over: Mt 147% 29 Lk 5!%, al. mult.; in NT also, answering the question, where? (as c. gen., dat.), Mk 436 112, Lk 2%, Jo 1%; émi +. airdé, Ac 11° 21, al.; of motion to a vicinity, to, Mk 16?, Ac 8%, al.; (6) metaph. (in wh. “the ace. is more widely prevalent than it strictly should be,” Bl., § 43, 1); of blessings, evils, etc., coming upon one, c. ace. pers., Mt 10! 12, Ac 217, Jo 184, Eph 5°, al.; of addition (dat. in cl.), Avan emi Avayv, Phl 27"; éxicadety dvopa eri (v.8. émixadéw), Ac 15!", Ja 27; xadeiv emi, to call after, Lk 159; of number or degree: émi tpis (cl. eis 7.), thrice, Ac 106 111; eri rdeiov, the more, further, Ac 4'", 11 Ti 216 3° (y. also infr., 2, (a)); ef’ dcov (v. infr., ib.), forasmuch as, Mt 254% 45, Ro 111%; of power, authority, control, Lk 1%, Ac 71°, Ro 514, He 3°, al.; of the direction of thoughts and feelings, wnto, towards, Lk 117 2378, Ac 9°42 Ro 1122 Ga 49, Eph 27, 1 Ti 5°, al.; of purpose, for, Mt 3’, Lk 234; ég 6 mdpe (Rec. ep &), Mt 26°°; of hostility, against, Mt 247, Mk 32426 10" 138, Lk 95, Jo 1318, Ac 754, 1 Co 7%, 11 Co 18; of reference, concerning, for (cl. usually dat.), Mk 9% 1574, Jo 19%4, Ro 4% 2. Of time, (a) during, for: Lk 425 (WH, txt., omits év/), Ac 13%! 1618, He 11°, al.; éd’ dcov (xpovov), as long as, for so long time as, Mk 9", Ro 7}, al. (for 颒 6. in another sense, v. supr., 1, (b)); é#’ ixavoy (v.s. t.), Ac 20"; émi mAciov (v. supr., 1, (0)), yet longer, further, Ac 20° 244; (b) on, about, towards (cl. eis): Lk 108° Ac 31 4°. IV. In composition, emi signifies: wp, éraipw; Upon, emiyeros, eridnpew, emixabifw; towards, émBdérw, érex- teivw; over (of superintendence), émurdrys; again, in addition, ératéw, eriouvayw ; against, éropKkéw, ériBovAr. ém-Baivw, [in LXX chiefly for 259;] 1. to get up on, mount: seq. emi, c. acc., Mt 21° XX); to embark in (a boat), go aboard: c. dat., Ac 277; seq. eis, Ac 21° (Rec.); absol., Ac 217. 2. to go up to, go on to, enter: seq. eis, Ac 20!§ 214; c. dat., Ac 251.+ ém-Bdéddo, [in LXX for now, mw, ete.;] 1. trans., to cast, lay or put upon: c. acc. et dat., Mk 11’, 1 Co 7°5; c. acc., seq. émi c. acc., Re 18°, WH, mg.; r. xetpa (-as) éri (B1., § 37, 7), of seizing a prisoner, Mt 265°, Lk 20!® 21%, Jo 73°, Ac 518 2127; c. dat. (Polyb.), Mk 1446, Ac 4°; c. inf., Ac 12!; riv x. er dporpov, Lk 952; éxiBAnua emi iudriov, Lk 5%6; éri iwariw, Mt 91% 2. Intrans., (a) to throw oneself or rush upon: 7. kvpara eis t. tAoiov, Mk 487; metaph., to put one’s mind upon (but v. Field, Notes, 41 ff.), érvBaddv exArAaev, when he thought thereon (se. 7. Ayjware), he wept (EV, txt.; R, mg., he began to weep; ef. M, Pr., 131): Mk 147? (vy. also Swete, in 1.); (b) to fall to one’s share: rd eriBaddov (sc. dat.; Hdt., al., a technical formula freq. in z.; Deiss., BS, 230, LAH, 152), Lk 1512,+ 168 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT *+ ém-Bapéw, -0, to put a burden on, be burdensome : fig., absol., iGo! 25; ie, aces pers,.'2 Ph 2?) 11 hess. (ci Mis Ta ))en ém-BiBdtw, [in LXX chiefly for 255 hi.;]. to place upon: c. ace. pers., Lk 104 1935, Ac 2374.+ ém-Bdérw, [in LXX for yA3 hi., 435, AN, etc.;] to look upon. In NT, as in LXX (1 Ki 1?! 916, Ps 24 (25)!6, To 33, al.), to look on with favour: seq. émi, c. acc. pers., Lk 145 9°8, Ja 23.+ éml-BAnpa, -ros, 7d, [In LXX: Is 3%*;] 1. that which is thrown over, acover. 2. a tapestry, hanging (Is, l.c.). 3. that which is put on; (a) embroidery; (b) a patch: Mt 916, Mk 271, Lk 596.+ ém-Bodw, -@, to cry out: Ac 254 (Rec., for Boaw, q.v.).t émt-Boudy, -7s, 7, [in LXX: Es 272, 1 Hs 573, 1 Mac 57, al.;] a plan against, a plot: Ac 94 20% 19 2330+ t+ ém-yapBpevw (<< yauPpds, a connection by marriage), [in LXX: Ge 349, 1 Ki 187 *, 11 Ch 18}, m Ks 914 (jnn hithp.), Ge 38° R (a2 pi.), 1 Mac 1054 56*;] 1. to enter into affinity with: c. dat. (LXX, Il. c., exc. Ge 388). 2. to marry (as deceased husband’s next of kin, cf. Ge 388): c. acc., Mt 2274.+ * éml-yevos, -ov ( 172 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Pr 2725, Si 33!* (3025), 1 Mac 11°’*;] to take care of: c. gen., Lk EO ee Ge Beers émpedds, adv., [in LXX for pr, etc.;] carefully: Lk 158.+ ém-pévw, [in LXX: Ex 125° (AM hith.)*;] to stay on, tarry or abide still: seq. év,1 Co 168; avrod, there, Ac 1534 (WH, txt., RV, txt., omit) 214; c. dat., 7. capxi, Ph] 1°4; seq. rapa, c. dat. pers., Ac 2814; apds, c. acc. pers., 1 Co 16’, Ga 118; c. acc. temp., Ac 1048, 214,10 2812, 14, 7 Co 167. Metaph., to continue in a pursuit or state: c. dat., t. duaptia, Ro 61; +. dmoria, ib. 1173; +. riores, Col 12%; adrois (v. CGT, in 1.), 1 Ti 41°; +. ypyorérnt, Ro 11*?; ©. ptep. (cf. Bl., § 73, 4; 76, 2), Jo 87), Ac 1216+ ém-vedw, [in LXX: Pr 2674 (453 ni.), 1 Mac 657, 11 Mac 41° 1115 1429*;) to nod in command or approval, to nod approval, consent : Ae L820 émivowa, -as, 9 (<< érwvoew, to contrive), [in LXX: Je 20, Wi 616 914 14! 154, Si 407, m Mac 1245, 1v Mac 17?*;] a thought, design: Ae Set ** emopkéw, -@ (<< éiopxos), [in LXX: 1 Es 14, Wi 147§*;] to swear falsely, forswear oneself: Mt 5°%.t émi-opkos, -ov, [in LXX: Za 5° (yaw ni.)*;] 1. of oaths, sworn falsely. 2. Of persons, perjured ; as subst., a perjurer, false swearer : ett oe, émiodca, V.S. Ere. *+t émuovavos, -ov (cf. wepiovovos, [in LXX for m>1p, De 7°, etc.]), found only in the phrase dpros é., EV, daily; R, mg., for the coming day: Mt 6" Lk 11%. (Several derivations find support, each pointing to a different meaning. 1. < émidoa (Sc. jyuépa) (or, << eri TH iodoav (sc. nuepav), Zorell, s.v.), hence, for the morrow or for the coming day (R, mg.). 2. (a) << ézi + ovata, hence, for subsistence, needful (Am. R, mg.); (b) y7), Ps 90 (91)* 139 (140)’ (720), Pr 181!*;] to throw a shadow upon, overshadow: c. dat., Ac 54; of a shining (Mt, l.c., and cf. Ex 40?° ®°, 1m Mac 28) cloud, c. dat., Mk 97; c. acc., Mt 17°, Lk 9%4; metaph. (cf. Pss, Pr, ll.c.), of the Holy Spirit, Lk 1°5.+ ém-oxoréw, -, [in LXX for IPB ni., etc.;] 1. to look upon, observe, examine: seq. wy, He 12'%. 2. As émicxértopa in LXX, NT, to visit, care for: 1 Pe 5* (R, txt.; WH om.; Cremer, 527).t t+ ém-oxom, -js, 7, [in LXX chiefly for 7p, MIPH;] 1. a visiting, visitation (eis é. rod madds, Lucian, dial. deor., 20, 6); as in LXX (after Heb.), of God’s visitation in mercy, or in judgment (Le 19°, Jb 1012, Je 6', Wi 27°, al.): Lk 1944, 1 Pe 2! (v. Hort, in 1.). 2. office, charge, esp. office of an ériaxoros (q.v.): Ac 17°@X*X), 1 Ti 31 (Cremer, 527 f., 864; DCG, ii, 809),+ 174 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT émi-cKxotos, -ov, 6 (D, ny, etc.;] to complete, accomplish, execute: c. acc. rel, Ro 158, 1 Co 7! 8% 11, Phl 16, He 85; of religious services (cf. Hdt., ii, 37, al.), He 9°; art. inf., 1 Co 81}, Mid., (a) to complete for oneself, make an end (R, mg.; pass., R, txt; cf. Meyer, in 1.): Ga 38; (6) to pay in full, pay the tax, be subject to: c. ace. (cf. Xen., Mem., iv, 8, 8), 1 Pe 5° (pass., RV, etc. ; cf. Thayer, s.v. ; ICG, in 1).t émutydetos, -a, -ov, [in LXX: 1 Ch 287, Wi 4°, 1 Mac 4%, al.;] 1. suitable, convenient. 2. useful, necessary: 7a é., necessaries, Ja 216,+ 176 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT ém-riOyur, [in LXX for Jn3, ow, etc. ;] 1. to lay, set or place upon: C. acc. rei, seq. ézi, c. acc. rei, Mt 234, Lk 155, Jo 96 (WH, txt.), 15, Ac 151° 283; ézi, c. gen. rel, Mt 277°; év, ib.; c. dat. pers., cravpov, Lk 237°; otépavov, Jo 197; dvoua, Mk 3'%17; arnyas, Lk 1039, Ac 168; emi, c. acc. pers., Re 2g18 : of the laying on of hands, 7. xefpa (-as), seq. éri, c. acc. pers., Mt 918, Mk 1648), Ac 817 97; «. dat. pers., Mt 1913: 1, ME 54916? F21875 uk 44013) Ac 65 19 gl 133 198 285 a O22, Mid., (a) to provide : Ac 281 (RV, put on board ; cf. Field, Notes, 149) ; (0) to throw oneself wpon, attack: c. dat. pers., Ac 18”, 9. to add to: Re 228 (v. supr., and cf. Swete, in 1.).t ém-tipdw, -@, [in LXX for “wa, Ge 37}, Ps 95, Za 33); Si 11’, al.;] 1. to honour. 2. to raise in price. 3. to mete out due measure ; (a) to award; (b) to censure, rebuke, admonish: absol., 1 Ti 4°; c. dat., Mt 826 1718 1913, Mk 439 882 1013, Lk 43%, 41 924 21, 42, 55 173 115 1939, Ju®; seq. iva, Mt 1216 1629 2031, Mk 312 839 1048, Lk 1899; seq. Aeyur, A€yer, etc., Mt 1672, Mk 125 83% 925, Lk 435 9340 + SYN.: éd€yxw, q.v. émitipia, -as, 7 (<< érityzaw), [in LXX: Wi 31°*;] 1. citizenship, franchise. 2. As in Inser. (LS, s.v.), LXX, le. (= cl. 76 émiripuov), punishment, penalty : 1 Co 2%.t ém-tpérw, [in LXX (usually with v.l. éruerp-) : Ge 39° (ary), ete. ;] 1. to turn to, commit, entrust. 2. to yield, permit: 1 Co 16’, He 6°; ¢. dat. pers., Mk 5%, Jo 19%*; id. c. inf. (ef. M, Pr., 205), Mt 8?" 198 Lk 832 999, sl Ac 212% 40°97%: 7 Ti 32. ¢. inf., Mk 104... Pass:,e;dat..eb inf., Ac 26! 2816, 1 Co 1434.+ * émutpoetio ( 1 Mae ti? 132 142%) 4. an administrator, a steward: Mt 208, Lk 8°. 2. a guardian (c. gen. pers., 1 Mae, ll. c.): Ga 4?.+ ém-ruyxdvw, (in LXX: Ge 392 (nbx hi.), Pr 1227 (qr) *;] 1. to light wpon. 2. to obtain, attain to: Ja 4*, c. gen. rei (as in cl.), He 615 1133; ¢. acc. (late Gk.), Ro 117 (Ree. sourov).t ém-paivw, [in LXX for "aN hi. etce.;] 1. to show forth. 2. (= pass. in cl.) to appear: Ac 27°; c. dat. pers., Lk 179; metaph., Tit 34; c. dat., ib. 21! (Cremer, 567).+ émupdvera, -as, 7 (<< émcpavys), [in LXX: um Ki 78 (N'}13), Ks 5}, Am 5*?, 11 Mac 2?! 324 54 1222 1415 1527, 11 Mac 2° 5% 51*;] (in late Gk. and Inser., freq. of deities, v. MM, Hap., xiv), a manifestation, appear- ances 1 Th 28,4176", ar Tit 455 Tig 28 (ef Mr Ph 14S ft emiparrjs, -€s (<< érupaivw), [in LXX (v. Thayer, s.v.) for N'913, etc., Jg 18°, Jl 2131, al.; m Mac 673, m1 Mac 5*, al.;] renowned, illustrious, notable: Ac 27° (XX) (cf. MM, Hap., xiv).t t ém-patoxw (variant form of émpdcxw, q.v.), [in LXX: Jb 25° MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 177 (San hi.) 3126 41900) (655 hi.) *;] to shine forth: fig., c. dat., Eph 5! (on v.1. -avoe, v. ICC, Westc., AR, in 1.).t ém-pépo, [in LXX chiefly for mbzy;] 1. to bring upon or against : kpiow, Ju® 2. to impose, inflict: Ro 3°.t ** ém-pwvéw, -@, [in LXX: 1 Hs 947 AR, m Mac 123, m1 Mac 718 *;] to call out, shout: c. acc. rei, Ac 214; c. dat. pers., ib. 227%; seq. Aéyovres, Lk 2371; orat. rect., Ac 127%.¢ ém-doxw, [in LXX for 55m hi., Jb 4199 A (BN, émdavox-) *;3] 1. tolet shine. 2. to dawn (cf. MM, Eap., xiv): Lk 2354; seq. eis, Mt 281.+ émyetpéw, - (<) + épitw (<< épis), [in LXX for AM, etc.;] to wrangle, strive: Mt 12!9 (LXX, xexpafera).t ** 2oBia, (T, cl., -eta), -as, 7, [in Sm.: Ez 231!*;] (on the origin and history of the word, v. Hort, Ja., 81 ff; Ellic. on Ga 5°; Cremer, 262), ambition, self-seeking, rivalry: Ja 31416; Kar’ épGiav, Phl 23; oi e€ €., Ro 28, Phi 11”; pl. (BI., § 32, 6; WM, 220; Swete, Mk., 153), 11 Co 12?°, Ga 5?°,+ Ep.ov, -ov, 7d, [in LXX for way, Le 1347, Is 1'8, al.;] wool: He oe, he et 180 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Epis, -Ldos, acc., épw (on the declension, v. Bl., § 8, 3; WH, App., 157), 7, [in LXX: Ps 138 (139), Si 281! 405°*;) strife, wrangling, contention: Ro 129 1318, 1 Co 33, m Co 122, Ga 529, Ph] 115 1 Ti 64, Tit 3°; pl. (v.s. épi6ia), Ro 13'3, WH, mg., 1 Co 111, Ga, l.c., WH, mg.t ¥*+ épidvov, -ov, Td (dim. of épudos, q.v.), [in LXX: To 213 *;] Mt 25%3, Lk 15° (épipov, WH, txt.).t €ptpos, -ov, [in LXX chiefly for ™];] a kid: Mt 2532, Lk 159, WH, txt.t ‘Eppas, -a, acc., -av (Doric form of ‘Epuqs), Hermas, a Christian : Ro 1614,+ éppnveta, V.S. Epunvia. Eppyveutys, -ov, 6 (<< épunvevw), [in LXX for yp hr, Ge 4234 *7) an interpreter : 1 Co 1428 (WH, mg.).t éppyvedw, [in LXX: 1 Hs 47 (a25M), Es 103 Jb 4218*;] 1. to explain. 2. to interpret: Lk 2427 (WH, mg.), Jo 13% 43 97, He 72.+ éppnvia (T, cl., -eta), -as, 7 (<< Epuyvevw), [in LXX (-eéa), Si, prol. 14 47)", Da LXX 5!*;] interpretation: 1 Co 12! 1426,+ “Eppijs, -ov, acc., “Epunv, 6, Hermes; (a) the Greek god (Lat. Mercurius): Ac 1412; (b) a Christian: Ro 1614.+ “Eppoyévns, -ovs, 6, Hermogenes, a Christian: 11 Ti 1)°,+ éptretdv, -00, 76 (< Eprm, to crawl), [in LXX chiefly for wan, prw 5] a creeping thing, reptile: Ac 10” 11°, Ro 178, Ja 37.+ épulpds, -a, -dv, [in LXX for ooN , Is 632; é€. @adaoca for )ID-O?, Ex 10), al.;] red: 7 &. @adacaa, the Red Sea, Ac 7*°, He 1129.+ Zpxopat, [in LXX very freq. for N12, also for 75a ni., MMN, etc., 34 words in all;] 1. to come; (a) of persons, either as arriving or returning from elsewhere: Mt 8°, Mk 6%!, Lk 78, Jo 427, Ro 9%, al.; seq. aad, Mk 5%5 71, Jo 3?, al.; éx, Lk 51’, Jo 331, al.; eis, Mk 179, al.; dua seq. «is, Mk 71; ev (Cremer, 263 f., but v.s. év), Ro 157°, 1 Co 421; éri, c. acc., Mk 6°38 1138, Jo 1933, al.; xard, c. acc., Lk 10°% Ac 16’; mapa, c. gen., Lk 849; c. acc., Mt 152°, Mk 914, al.; c. dat. comm., incomm. (M, Pr., 75, 245), Mt 215, Re 2516; with adverbs: zodev, Jo 38, al.; dvw6ev, Jo 3°!; dzurbev, Mk 527; dde, Mt 829; exet, Jo 18°; mov, He 11°; seq. éws, Lk 447; aypr, Ac 11°; with purpose expressed by inf., Mk 5!4, Lk 159, al.; by fut. ptep., Mt 2749; iva, Jo 12°; eis tovto, tva, Ac 971; da, c. acc., Jo 12°; before verbs of action, épyerar kai, AGE cai, etc.: Mk 218, Jo 6), al.; Epyou Kat ide, Jo 147 1154; eXOwy (redundant; Dalman, Words, 20 f.), Mt 28 87, Mk 7%, Ac 16%, al.; similarly épyopevos, Lk 15°, al.; of coming into public view: esp. of the Messiah (6 épyopevos, Mt 11°, al.; v. Cremer, 264), Lk 316, Jo 425; hence, of Jesus, Mt 111°, Lk 734, Jo 54%, al.; of the second coming, Mt 1078, Ac 1", 1 Co 4°, 1 Th 5?, al.; (0) of time: épyovra nuepae (pres. for fut.: Bl., § 56, 8), Lk 2329, He 8§(@XX); fut., Mt 915, Mk 27°, al.; epxerae dpa, ore, Jo 4° 2, al.; HAGev, eANAVOe H Spa, Jo 13! 16%? 17!; 1 qépa t. Kupiov, 1 Th 52; xaipoi, Ac 31°; (c) of things and MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 181 events: xaraxAvopyds, Lk 1727; Auds, Ac 711; 7% dpyyn, 1 Th 11°; 6 Avxvos, Mk 4?! (y. Swete, in 1.). Metaph., 7. dya@d, Ro 38; r. réXevov, 1 Co 18%; 4 iors, Ga 32525; % évroAn, Ro 7%; with prepositions: ék r. Oriews, Re 714; eis 7. xetpov, Mk 5%; cis weipacmor, ib. 14%8, al. 2. to go: dricw, c. gen. (Heb. "INN 725), Mt 1624, Mk 894, Lk 923; oup, Jo 213; éddv, Lik 244, (Cf. dv-, ér-av-, am-, &-, eis, éx-euo-, map-eao-) avv-eo-, €&-, Si-ef-, é-, KaT-, Tap-, GvTi-Tap-, Tepl-, ™po-, Tpod-, Tvv- €pxop.an.) SYN.: wopevopa, xwpéw (v. Thayer, s.v. épxopar). épa, v.s. Aéyw, p. 496. épwrdw, -6, [in LXX chiefly for bxw;] 1. to ask, question (cl.): absol., Lk 193! 2268 Jo 8!; c. acc. pers., Jo 92! 161% 30 1871; seq. déeyov, Mt 164, Lk 233, Jo 11% 21 512 919 165; ¢, dupl. acc. (WM, § 32, 4a), Mt 2174, Mk 41°, Lk 20%, Jo 1678 (M, Pr., 66,); c. acc. pers., seq. wept, Lk 945, Jo 181%, 2. In late Gk. (Milligan, NT'D, 51; not, as Cremer, 716, Thayer, s.v., a ‘‘Hebraism’’), = airéw (q.v.), to ask, request: ¢. acc. pers., Jo 1416; seq. imperat., Lk 141% 19, Phl 43; Aéeyov, Mt 1573, Jo 1271; seq. iva (M, Pr., 208), Mk 776, Lk 736 1627, Jo 447 1715 1931.38 7 Th 4! 1 Jo 5; drws, Lk 7? 115", Ac 2379; c. inf., Lk 5? 887, Jo 449 Ac 3% 104 2318 1 Th 5!2; c. acc. pers., seq. wept, Lk 438, Jo 17% 29, 1 Jo 56; iwép, 1 Th 242; 7a (WH, txt., om. 7a) apods eipnvnv, Lk 14°? (cf. di-, éx-epwrdw). SYN.: v.8. airéw. ** tabs, -Hros, ) (<< evvypt, to clothe ; hence, éoys, Lk, ll. c., Elz.), [in LXX:1 Hs 87578 11 Mac 835 118*;] clothing, raiment: Lk 23" 244 Ac 1099 19271, Ja, 223, ¥* ZaOynors, -ews, 7, [in LXX: pl, m Mac 3%, mr Mac 1¢*;] clothing: pl., Ac 12%+ éo0iw, and (poét. and late prose) éoOw, [in LXX chiefly for 5x5] to eat; (a) absol.: Mt 14771, Mk 6%, Jo 4°!, al.; & 7. gayely (on this aor. form, v. M, Pr., 111), 1 Co 117!; dddvar payetv, c. dat. pers., Mk 543, al.; é€ xat wivew, Mt 6753!) Lk 10’, al.; of ordinary use of food and drink, 1 Co 94 11%; of partaking of food at table, Mk 2!°, Lk 529, al.; opp. to fasting, Mt 111°, Lk 5%, al.; of revelling, Mt 24+, Lk 124°; (0) c. acc. rei: Mt 6”, Mk 1°, Jo 6%!, Ro 14?, al. ; dprov (Heb. ond by), Mt 152, Mk 329, al.; rov éavrod a., 1 Th 3; a. seq. rapa, c. gen. pers., 1 Th 38; ra seq. id., Lk 10’; +. rdoxa, Mt 2617, Mk 141”, al; 7. xupaxov Setrvov, I Co 117°; 7. Ovaias, 1 Co 1018; seq. é« (= cl. part. gen.), Jo 676 5 51, 1 Co 1178; amd (cf. Heb. ja 55), Mt 1527, Mk 78; metaph., to devour, consume: He 10°’, Ja 5°, Re 177° (ef. xar-, ovv-erbiw). *Eodet (Rec. EoAd, v. WH, Notes, 155), 6, Hsli, an ancestor of Jesus: Lk 325,+ ** 2a-omtpov, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Wi 776, Si 12!'*;] a mirror: 1 Co 1312, Ja 125.+ éonépa, -as, # (prop. fem. of éo7epos), [in LXX chiefly for 29y ;] 182 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT (a) (sc. dpa), evening: Lk 24°°, Ac 4% 201° 2878; (6) (sc. xwpa), the west.t éotrepivds, -7, -ov (= the more freq. éo7épios, -a, -ov), [in LXX for any, tv Ki 1615, Ps 140 (141), al.;] of the evening, evening: Lk 1288 (WH, 4 mg. F ).t ‘Eopop (‘Eopav, Lk, |.c.; Ree. "Eap-), 6 (Heb. Jim, Ge 467, Nu 2671, 1 Ch 25, al.), [in LXX both forms, ut supr. (cf. ICC, on Mt, l.c.; WH, § 408) ;] Hsrom (AV), Hezron (RY), an ancestor of Jesus: Mt 18, Lk 3%3.+ ‘Eopdv, Eop-, v.s. Eopop. éaxatos, -y, -ov, [In LXX chiefly for mans 74s 3] Jast, utmost, extreme ; (a) of place: of the lowest or least honoured place, Lk 14%; +, écyxaz7ov, c. gen. part., Ac 18 1347; (0) of time: Mt 2012,14, Mk 12% 22, opp. to zparos, Mt 208, 1 Co 1545, Re 2!9 al.; ra é. kal tr. mpora, Mt 124°, Lk 1176, 11 Pe 2?°; of the Eternal, 6 rpdros kai 6 é., Re 117 28 2213; in phrases relating to the Messianic age and the consummation of the Kingdom of God: én écydrov (-wv) Tr. jpepar, He 12, m1 Pe 33; 7. ypovwy, 1 Pe 179; €. dpa, 1 Jo 218; én’ é. xpovov, Jul8; é é. npepas, Ac 217, Ja 5°, u Ti 3!; neut., écxarov, as adv., Mk 1222, 1 Co 158; (c) of rank: Mk 9%5, 1 Co 4°. * éaydtws, adv., extremely, utterly; é. éxew (= Lat. in extremis esse), only in late writers (cf. év éoxadros ets, FIJ, Ant., ix, 8, 6), to be at the point of death: Mk 6*3.+ éow, Ion. and old Att. form of eiow (<< eis), adv., [in LXX for MO3B, etc.;] 1. prop., after verbs of motion (to) within, into: Mt 26°8, Mk 1454; ¢, gen., Mk 1516. 2. As freq. in cl. (= cl. edov), after verbs of rest, within: Jo 2076, Ac 58; of é. (opp. to of cw), I Co 517; 6 é. avOpwros, Ro 722, 1 Co 416, Eph 316.+ éow0ev (), Ac 4°.+ evepyetéw, -& (*;) ready for use, fit: of things, c. dat., He 67; seq. eis, Lk 1435; of persons, c. dat., Lk 9° (for rabbinic parallels, v. Dalman, Words, 119 f.).t ed0éws, adv. (<< evOus), [in LXX: Jb 5° (oNmB), Wi 5”, 1 Mac 11, al.;] straightway, at once, directly: Ga 116, Ja 14, 11 Jo! (cf. Dalman, Words, 28f.), Re 4, and freq. in Mt, Lk, Jo, Ac (in Mk, evs, q.v.). *+ edOudpopéw, -@, of ships, to run a straight course (Philo): Ac Nd ae ** edOupéw, -@ (<< evOvuos), [in Sm.: Ps 31 (32), Pr 15%*;) 1. trans., to make cheerful (AXsch.). 2. Intrans. (Kur., Plut.; so mid. in Xen., Plat.), to be of good cheer: Ac 277% 25, Ja 513.+ ** e§-Qupyos, -ov, [in LXX: m Mac 1126*;] 1. kind (Hom.). 2. of good cheer (Adsch., al.): Ac 2736.+ * ed0dpws, adv., cheerfully: Ac 2419.+ edOdvw (<< edOvs), [in LXX: Nu 2273, Jo 247% (m3 hi.), Jg 14’, T Ki 1870, 265s), Pr 2074, Si) 22 pall dito: daneetis daa. me eo make straight: Jo 1° (UXX, érounacare).t e0Qus, -eta, -v, [in LXX chiefly for wr;] 1. straight, direct: tpiBor, Mt 33, Mk 1°, Lk 34 @XX); eis eiGedas, (se. dd0vs), Lk 3°; ev. 68ds, fig., Ac 13!°, m Pe 2; as pr. name of a street, Ac 941. 2. In moral sense, straightforward, right: xapdia, Ac 87} (ef. Ps 71! 31 (32), al.).t edOus, adv., [in LXX (more freq. than e6éws) chiefly for W1;] = cibéws, straightway, directly: Mt 3'6 13°72) 1427 2123 2674, Lk 649, Jo 133% 32 1934, Ac 1016 and 42 (41) times in Mk.t edOdtns, -nTos, 7 (y hi.;] to help on one’s way (Soph., al.). Pass., to have a prosperous jowrney ; metaph. (Hadt., al.), to prosper, be prospered, be successful: ut Jo*, Ro 1", t Co 16? (on the tense, v. M, Pr., 54; ICC, in 1.).t *+ ed-mdp-edpos, -ov (<< cd, mdpedpos, sitting near; cf. Wi 94), con- stantly attendant or waiting on: tr. kvpiw, 1 Co 7° (Rec. ebapdc-).t ** ed-meOns, és (< cd, weiMopar), [in LXX: 1v Mac 126 AR*;] ready to obey, compliant: Ja 317.+ * eb-mept-otatos, -ov ( xaza70\0.7,\Ceov, Galt) 1\Per48" 1 Jo soe ypl.gepa oe (Cremer, 728).t tO€Anors, -ews, 7 (eAw), [in LXX: mu Ch 15", Pr 8% (Fx), Hz 18° (ppm), Da LXX 114° (ay), To 12'8, Wi 16, 1 Mac 126, 111 Mac 226 *-] in collog. and MGr. = 76 Oédew, will : He 24.+ 0édw (the strengthened form é#€Aw is found in Hom., and is the more freq. in Attic; v. Rutherford, NPhr., 415f.), [in LXX for MAN, PSM; c. neg., JNO pi., ete.;] to will, be willing, wish, desire (more freq. than BovAopa, q.v., in vernac. and late Gk., also in MGr.; for various views as to its relation to 8., v. Thayer, 286; but v. also Bl., § 24, s.v.): absol., Ro 916, 1 Co 419 1218, Ja, 415; +. Qeod Oédovros, Ac 187!; ¢. acc. rei, Mt 207, Mk 1436, Jo 157, Ro 71516 1 Co 421 736, Ga 517; c. inf., Mt 54°, Mk 104, Jo 62167, Ro 7?!, Ga 49; ¢. acc. et inf., Mk 74, Lk 1°, Jo 217423, Ro 1619, 1 Co 145, Ga 618; ob GéAw, Mt 18°, al.; id. c. inf., Mt 2!§; Mk 626, Jo 54, 1 Co 167; seq. va, Mt 7!2, Mk 625, Jo 1774; opp. to row, tpacow, evepyéw, Ro 7119, 11 Co 81%11, Phi 233; seq. 7 (ICC, inl.; Deiss., LAH, 179,,), 1Co 149; 6Awy év rarewvo- ppoowy (of his own mere will, by humility, R, mg), Col 2!8; in OT quotations, for Heb. PEM, c. acc. pers., Mt 27%; c. acc. rei, Mt 913 1927, He 10° 8; c¢. inf., 1 Pe 31°; for yan, c. inf., Ac 778 (v. Cremer, 726 ff.). Gepédtos, -ov (y) * 5] thyine: &vdov, Re 18!2 (Diosc.).t Oupiapa, -ros, ro (<< @yudw), [in LXX chiefly for ny ;] fragrant stuff for burning, incense: % dpa rod 6., Lk 1°; Ovovacrypiov rod 9. (Ex 3077, al.), ib; pl., Re 5§ 8% 4 1813.+ Ouptatypioy, -ov, 7d ( @, riorews, I Th 58.t I 1, t, tata, 70, indecl., cota, the ninth letter. Asa numeral, .’ = 10, t, = 10,000. *"Idevpos, -ov, 6 (Heb. NI, Nu 32*!), Jairws: Mk 5”, Lk 841.+ *laxdB, 6, indecl. (Heb. 3px), Jacob; 1. The patriarch: Mt 1? 81, Jo 4556 Ac 78, al.; asin Heb. (cf. Nu 237, Is 418, Si 2312, al.), of his descendants, Ro 1176@XX), 2, The father-in-law of Mary: Mt 1! !6 (on the form as distinct from that of the next word, v. Deiss., BS, 316,). "IdkwBos, -ov, 6 (Heb., v. previous word), James; 1. Son of Zebedee: Mt 474, Mk 11% 29, Ac 118 127, al. 2. Son of Alpheus: Mt 10°, Mk 234, al.; commonly identified with ‘I. 6 puxpos, James the little, son of Mary (v.s. Mapia, 3; KAwzas), Mt 275°, Mk 154° 16! (cf. Jo 19"). 3. The Lord’s brother (v.s. ddeAdos): Mt 1355, Mk 6%, Ac 1217, al., I Co 15’ (probably), Ga 1° 2%, Ja 11, Ju‘. 4. The father of the apostle, "Iovdas "IaxwBov: Lk 616, Ac 138, apa, -Tos, 76 (< idowar), [in LXX for NW (u Ch 3616, Ke 104, 212 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Je 40 (33)°), etc. i 1. most freq. in cl., a means of healing, remedy (Thue., al.; Wi11410%). 2. = tacts (q. v.), a healing (Plat.; Je, l.c.): pl., 1 Co 12% 28 30, "lau Bpis, 6, Jambres (cf. Ex 741"): 1 Ti 38+ *"lavvat, (Rec. -va), 6, Jannai: Lk 374.+ "lavas, 6, Jannes (cf. lap Bpys): u Ti 3°.t idopot, -Guar, [in LXX for Np x (Ge 201, al.), exc. Is 3076 61! (wan) ;] to heal: c. acc. pers., Lk 517 619 92 11, 42 144 2251, Jo 447, Ac 984 10*8 288; pass., Mt 8% 13 1528, Lk 77 847 1715, Jo 518; id. seq. dao, Mk 529, Lk gi7 fig., of spiritual healing, Mt 131°, Jo 1940, Ac 2827 (LXX); pass., He 1913. Ja 516 1 Pe 24. SYN.: Oeparevu, q.v. *"Idper (Rec. -ped, Li, “Iape9), 6 (Heb. TH, LXX “Idped, FlJ, Iapedos), Jared (Ge 5): Lk 397.+ tacts, -ews, ) (n) 2322, 1 Mac 2!" *;] a priesthood, body of priests : i. dyvov, I Pe 2°; Bac. i., ib. ® (LXX, Ex, l.c.).t tepatedw (cl. = tepdopar), [in LXX chiefly for jMD pi.;] to be a priest, officiate as a priest: Lk 18 (the word is freq. in Inser.; v. LS, _8.v.; Deiss., BS, 215; LAH, 70; Cremer, 734).t "lepex® (T, ‘Iep-; Rec. ‘Iepyw; ef. Bl, § 3, 4, 4; WH, App., 155), 7, indecl. (Heb. 1, Imp), Jericho: Mt 207°, Mk 104°, Lk 1030 18%5 19!, He 11°9.+ *lepepias (T, Rec. ‘Iep-; v. WH, § 408), -ov, 6 (Heb. mop, im), Jeremiah the prophet: Mt 217 164 27° (a ref. to Za 111%).+ iepevs, -ews, 56 (] a pulling down, destruction: fig., x. éxvpwpatwy, 11 Co 104; opp. to oixodopuy, ib. ® 1319.+ xa0-atpéw, -@, [in LXX for Pn, pup, MH, etc. 3] 1. to take down: c. acc. pers. (the technical term for removal after crucifixion, Field, Notes, 44), Mk 15° 46, Lk 2353, Ac 1379, 2. to put down by force, pull down, destroy: drobyxas, Lk 1238 (opp. to oixodopeiv) ; devaoras, Lk 157; e6vy, Ac 131%; pass., Ac 1927 (diminished, Field, Notes, 129 f.) ; fig., to refute: Aoywpovs, 11 Co 10°.t kaBaipw (<(xaGapds), [in LXX: Is 287" (wy ho.), m Ki 46, Je 28 (51)*° 8*;] to cleanse: of pruning, Jo 15? (cf. xafapigw).t xa0dtep (for ka admep = xaGa), adv., [in LXX for WWND Ge. 124, Ex 7°, al.;] just-as, even as: Ro 34 46 913 1015 118 124, r Co 101° 1912, 1 Co 114) 31215) Qtr Eh) ty 3942 45 Ele 43ut ** xa0-darw, [in Sm.: Ca 1°*;] 1. to fasten on, put upon, c. acc. 2. Act. for mid. (ef. Bl., $53, 3), to lay hold of, attack: c. gen., xeipos, Ac 283.t txa@apitw (Hellenistic—FIlJ, Inser.—for Attic xaOaipw, q.v., on the vulgar -ep-, Mt 83, Mk 1*, v. Bl., §6, 1; Thackeray, Gr., 74), [in LXX chiefly for 74 ;] to cleanse, make clean. 1. In physical sense: c. ace. rei, fig., Mt 23726, Lk 113°; of disease (leprosy), c. acc. pers., Mt 83 108 115, Mk 14°42, Lk 427 612,18 722 171417: 1) Nerpa exabepicby (on the spelling v. supr.), Mt 8%. 2. In ethical sense: +. xapdcas, Ac 15° (cf. Si 381); 7. xetpas, Ja 48; Aaodv éavrd, Tit 214; 7. éxxAnoiay, Eph 5°; ¢. ace. pers. (rei), seq. dad (Bl., § 86,9; Deiss., BS, 216 f.), 11 Co 71, He 914,1 Jo 17%, 3. In ceremonial sense: Mk 719, Ac 1015 11°, He 922523 10? (cf. d:a-Kabapifw).t t xaBapropéds, -od, 7d (): 1 Pe 48, Ja 5; (v.l. for cavopévyn, WH, mg., Lk 24%?).+ Kah@s, adv. (, 1 Co 1323, Ja 5); ellips., Lk 13°. 2. Concessive, even if: Mt 2121 26%, Jo git 1038 128 He 1279, 3. As intensive of simple xaé (M, Pr., 167; WM, 730: Jannaris, Gr., 598), even, at least: Mk 5°8 6°, Ac 515, 11 Co 1116.+ Kava (Rec. -va), 7, indecl., Cana, of Galilee: Jo 2! 1! 446 212.+ Kavavatos, -ov, 6 (late Heb. N3N32), @ Cananean or Zealot (cf. fmdwryjs): Mt 104, Mk 318 (Rec. -virys).t Kavavirns, v.S. Kavavatos. Kavddnn, -ns, 7, Candace: Ac 8?7.+ kavwv, -ovos, 6 (cf. xavva, and Heb. 3?, @ reed), [in LXX: Mi 74, Jth 13°, tv Mac 77! (and in Aq., Ps 18 (19)5, Jb 38°) *;] 1. a rod or bar (Jth, l.c.). 2. a measuring rule; hence, metaph, 3. a rule or standard: Ga 6', 4. a Limit (RV, province) : 1 Cots 15 26.7 (Hor the history of the word and esp. its later meanings, v. Westc., Canon, App. A; cf. also MM, Eap., xv; Cremer, 744.)t LAC Vier v.s. Kadapvaovp. * kamnedw (<< xdrndos, a huckster, ef. Is 122 XX), Si 2629), to make a trade of (RV, mg., make merchandise of), or perhaps (cf. Is, l.c.) to corrupt (RV, txt.): m Co 2!7.t kamvés, -od, 6, [in LXX for 7wY;] smoke: Re 84 9% 31718 1411 158 18% 18 193; dzpis xamvov, Ac 219 @XX) + Kammadoxia, -as, 7, Cappadocia, a province of Asia Minor: Ac 2°, tbe st kap8ia, -as, #, [in LXX chiefly for 25, 135;] the heart, 1. the bodily organ which is regarded as the seat of life (11 Ki 18", rv Ki 9°, al.). 2. Ina psychological sense, the seat of man’s collective energies, the focus of personal life, the seat of the rational as well as the emotional and volitional elements in human life, hence that wherein lies the moral and religious condition of the man (DB, ii, 317f.; DCG, ii, 344%); (a) of the seat of physical life (Jg 19°, Ps 101 (102)5 103 (104)!°): Ac 141’, Ja 5°; (b) of the seat of spiritual life: Mt 58, Mik) 72?) luk iets Aeron eo 10° 10, Hpk 6? Valeo Ms (9%. Mirae al. ; opp. to ordépa, xelAea, Tpoowmoy, Mt 158, Mk 78, Ro 108: 9 1m Co 5}; Tepiropa) kapotas, Ro 29; é« x«., Ro 6!7,1 Pe 1m; amo Tov k., Mt 18%; ev OAn (e& Orns) 7. K., Mb 2237, Mk 1930 (EX); 3 yoo Kew (€pevvar, Suuyaten) ras k., Lk 1615, Bo 827, 1 Th 24; to think, etc., ev tr. «., Mt 94, Mk 28, Lk 1245, Ro 10°: ouvievar ee ™ «., Mt 131°, Jo 1940: eraxvvOn 7) K., MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 231 Mt 13!5@XX); wwpodv ri x., Jo 124; x. deta, Ac 871; rovnpd, He 312 dpueravénros, Ro 2°; etvar (€xew) ev tH x., I Co 7%, Phi 17; 6duvn TH Ks; Ro 92, 3. Of the central or innermost part of anything (of the pith of wood, Arist.) : 7. ys, Mt 124° (Cremer, 348 ff.). *+t xapdi0-yvdorns, -ov, 6 (<< xapdia, ywdorns), knower of hearts: Ac At Kdprros, -ov, 6, Carpus: 1 Ti 41%,t kaptés, -od, 6, [in LXX chiefly for "9;] fruit: of trees, Mt 12° 2119, Mk 1114, Lk 644 1367; of vines, Mt 2134, Mk 12?, Lk 201°, 1 Co 97; of fields, Mk 429, Lk 1217, m Ti 2°, Ja 57; BAaoravew, Ja 518; zroveiv (cf. Heb. "1p mizy), Mt 3!° 717-19 1326, Lk 3° 64 88 139, Re 22?; diddvar, Mt 138, Mk 478; depew, Mt 78, Jo 1274 15% 45816; darodiddvan, Mt 2141, Re 227; 6 «. 7. xovdéas (UR ™H, De 28*), Lk 12; +. éapvos (Ge 30%, al.), Ac 23°. Metaph., (a) of works, deeds: Mt 38 716 20 2148, Lk 38, Jo 15% 16; +, rvevparos, Ga 5°; +. dwrds, Eph 5°; 1. dixacoovvys, Ph] 1"; odpayiferOar rov x. (Deiss., BS, 238 f.), Ro 15°8; x. dyaGoi, Ja 317; (b) of advantage, profit: Phl 12 417; gyew, Ro 1% 67)”; avvayev, Jo 4°56; x, 7. duxatoovvns, He 124, Ja 318; of praise, Kap7rov xetAewy (Ho 142, al.; cf. Aisch., Hum., 830): He 1315.t kaptro-opéw, -0, [in LXX: Hb 317 (mp), Wi 107*;] to bear fruit: xdprov, Mk 4°8 (cf. Wi, lc.). Metaph., of conduct: Mt 13%, Mk 479, Lk 84, Ro 74:5, Col 12°; mid., Col 1°.t kaptro-pépos, -ov (<< xapzds, pépw), [in LXX: Je 27 (393), Ps 106 (107)%4 148° (") *;] fruitful: Ac 1417.+ kaptepéw, -&, [in LXX: Jb 2° (ptm hi.), Is 42)* (Myp), Si 2? 12°, m1, Iv Mac,*;] to be steadfast, patient : He 11?" (cf. rpoc-xaprepéw).t kdpos, -eos (-ovs) 76, [in LXX: Ge 8" (F)*;] a small dry stalk, a twig; metaph., of a minor fault: Mt 7°, Lk 64) 4.+ xatd (bef. a vowel xa7’, xa6’; on the freq. neglect of elision, v. Tdf., Pr., 95; WH, App., 1464), prep. c. gen., ace., down, downwards, I. C. gen. (WM, § 47, k; Bl., § 42, 2). 1. C. gen. rei, in local sense ; (a) down, down from: Mt 8%, Mk 5!8, Lk 8%8, 1 Co 114; (b) through- out (late usage; BI., l.c.): «. dAns x.7.A., Lk 414 23°, Ac 93! 1087; (c) in a peculiar adjectival phrase: 7 x. Baovs wrwxeia, deep or extreme poverty, 1 Co 8% 2. C. gen. pers., usually in hostile sense; (a) against (in cl. only after verbs of speaking, witnessing, etc.): opp. to brép, Mk 949; werd, Mt 1239; after émiOupeiv, Ga 517; Aadretv, Ac 618; ddacxev, Ac 218; Wevidecba, Ja 314; after verbs of accusing, etc., Mt 53, Lk 2314, Ro 888, al.; verbs of fighting, prevailing, etc., Mt 10°°, Ac 14?,1 Co 4°, al.; (6) of swearing, by: duvuu x. (BL, § 34, 1), He 613,16, cf. Mt 266, IT. C. acc. (WM, § 49d; BI., § 42, 2). 1. Of motion or direction; (a) through, throughout: Lk 8° 96 104, Ac 8186, al.; (6) to, towards, over against: Lk 10% (Field, Notes, 62), Ac 21° 167, Ga 21, Phi 314, al.; (c) in adverbial phrases, at, in, by, of: Kar’ 932 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT otkov, at home, Ac 24°; xar’ idiay (v.s. i8os); Kal’ éavrov, Ac 2816, Ro 14") Ja 21"; e. pron. pers., Ac1'72® 18!) Ro 11%, Mphoi > al) (avr time, at, during, about: Ac 876 12! 1973, Ro 99, He 1”, al. 3. Dis- tributive; (a) of place: «. rorovs, Mt 24’, al.; x. wodw, Lk 814, al.; k. éxxAnaiav, Ac 14%; (b) of time: x. éros, Lk 241; éopryy, Mt 27, al.; (c) of numbers, etc.: xa éva mavres, I Co 14%! (on xaG els, v.8. els) ; x. €xatov, Mk 649; «. pepos, He 9°; x. dvoua, Jo 10%. 4. Of fitness, reference, conformity, etc.; (a) in relation to, concerning: Ro “1% 4 7” 935, r Co 126 1018 Phi 112; x. wavra, Ac 1722, Col 3222, He Q17 415; (b) according to, after, like: Mk 7°, Lk 22%29, Jo 774, Ro 84 1415, Eph 2?, Col 28, Ja 28, al. III. In composition, x. denotes, 1. down, down from (xaraBaivw, etc.), hence, metaph.; (a) victory or rule over (katradovAdw, -Kupievw, etc.); (b) ‘‘ perfective” action (M, Pr., 111 ff.). 2. under (xataxadtmrw, etc.). 3. im succession (xabe&s). 4. after, behind (xatadeizw). 5. Hostility, against (xatadadéw). kata-Baivw, [in LXX chiefly for 1;] to go or come down, descend. 1. Of persons: Mt 31° 2417, Lk 251617 10%! 1781 1956, Jo 44% 49, 51 57) Ac 784 81 1029 20102310) 24, 2a ph 4195) seq: aro, Mt 8! 1429 274042, Mk 322 153°, Lk 1039, Jo 688, Ac 257, 1 Th 416; é&, Mt 179; éx 7. ovpavov, Mt 282, Mk 99, Jo 192 315 633: 41, 42, 50, 51, 58, Re 101 18! 20!; «is, Mk 12°, Lk 1029 1814, Jo 212, Ac 715 838 1425 168 1822 256, Ro 10’, Eph 4°; ézi, c. acc. loc., Jo 6'*; c. acc. pers., Lk 3%, Jo 13% 52; év, Jo 54); pds, c. ace pers., Ac 1071 144, Re 12%. 2. Of things: oxevos, Ac 101115; Bpoyn, Mt 7727; AatrAay, Lk 872; seq. dad, Lk 9°, Ac 86, Ja 117; éxi r. ynv, Lk 2244 (WH, R, mg., reject); é« +. otpavod seq. dd, Re 32 2119; id. seq. eis, Re 131%; émi, c. acc. pers., Re 167}. Fig., x. éws adov, Mt 1178, Lk 10%, WH, txt., Tr., mg. (xaraBiBacOnon, T, WH, mg., RY), (ef. ovv-kataBatvw).t kata-Bdéddw, [in LXX chiefly for 5p3 hi.;] 1. to cast down, prostrate: metaph., pass., 11 Co 4%. 2. to put down, lay down: metaph., mid., c. acc., OeweAvov, He 61.t *t+ kata-Bapéw, -6, to weigh down: metaph., ¢. acc. pers., 11 Co 1216+ txata-Bapivw, [in LXX: mu Ki 13% 14°6 (qy5), Jl 28, Si 8*;] = kataBapew: pass., pres. ptep., Mk 144°.+ kata-B.Bdtw, [in LXX for 3p (hi., etc.): De 214, Ez 3116, al. ;] to cause to go down, cast down: pass., €ws ddov, Mt 11° (WH, R, mg.), Lk 101° (WH, mg.).t ** kata-Body, -7s, 7 (n hith.), Je 27 (50) (y5y), ib. 38 (55m) *;] 1. to boast against, exult over: ¢. gen., Ro 1118, Ja 28; seq. card, c. gen., Ja 314 (T, om. xara). 2. seq. ev, to glory in (Za., l.c., Je 2738).+ kard-kepot, [in LXX: Pr 6° 23°4 (a5u7), Jth 13%, Wi 17°*;] 1. to lie down. 2. to lie sick: Mk 13° 24, Jo 58, Ac 285; seq. ert, c. gen., Ac 9°8; id. c. acc., Lk 5”; év, Jo 53. 3. to recline at meals (cf. avaxepor): Mk 14%, Lk 529; seq. ev, Mk 21°, Lk 737, 1 Co 810 + kata-Kddw, -@, [in LXX: Ez 19% (wns hoph.)*;] to break up, break in pieces: Mk 64!, Lk 916.+ kata-kdelw, [in LXX: Je 39 (32) (x5D), Wi 17216, 1 Mac 1321, 11 Mac 3°5*;] to shut up: ¢. ace. pers., seg. ev pvdAaky (-ais), Lk 37°, Ac 2619 + t+ kata-kAnpodotéw, @, [in LXX: De 1%8 2116 A (-vopew, B), (5n3), I Mac 3°6 NR (-vopew, A) *;] Ac 131%, Rec., = -vopéw, q.v.t + kata-KAnpovopew, -o, [in LXX for bn3, wo, etc.;] 1. to distribute by lot or as an inheritance (Nu 3418, Jos 141, al.): Ac 131% 2. to receive by inheritance (De 1°, al.).t kata-kdivw, [in LXX: Ex 2118 (5p3), Nu 24%, Jg 527 (yn), 1 Ki 161! (aap), Jth 1215, ur Mac 13*;] to lay down, make to lie down, esp. for meals: c. ace. pers., Lk 9!415; mid., to recline at meals: Lk 736 2430; seq, eis, Lk 148 (ef. Jth, 1.c.).t kata-khutw, [in LXX for yuw, Ps 77 (78), al.;] to inundate, deluge: pass., 11 Pe 39.t Kata-kuopds, -00, 6 (<< xataxdvlw), [in LXX chiefly for ban, Ge 617, al.; also for FW, Ps 31 (32)6, al.;] a flood, deluge: Mt 24%% 39, Lk 172", Pe 24 t+ kat-akodoudéw, -@, [in LXX: Je 1716 (Ay5), 1 Mac 6%, al.;] to follow after: Lk 235°; c, dat. pers., Ac 16!’.t kata-kéTrw, [in LXX for M53 hi., MND pi., etc.;] to cut up, cut in pieces (cf. Is 27°, Je 217, u Ch 34%): éavrov Alors, Mk 5°.t kata-Kpnpvitw (<< kpyvos), [in LXX: m Ch 25” (q>wz hi.), 1 Mac 1215 1443 ty Mac 4°*;) to throw over a precipice, cast down head- long: Lk 4?9.t *t katd-Kptpa, -Tos, 76 (w ;] to pitch one’s tent, lodge, dwell: seq. ev, Mt 13%, Lk 13!°; izé, c. ace., Mk 4825 err’ EArt, Ac 226 (LXX) + t kata-oKyvwors, ews, 7, [in LXX: 1Ch 28? (ni33) , Ez 37?" (JEW), To 14, Wi 98, m Mac 14% (R)*;] 1 prop., an encamping, taking up one’s quarters (Polyb., al., v. LS; and ef. LXX, ll.c.). 2. a lodging, abode: of birds, Mt 8”, Lk 9°%.+ * kata-cxidtw, to overshadow : c. ace., He 9°.t xara-oxoréw, -o, (in LXX: u Ki 10, 1Ch 19% (53 pi.), 1 Mac 5% (A) *;] to view closely, inspect, spy out: c. acc., Ga 2*.t xard-oKowos, -ov, 6, {in UXX for 535 pi.;] a spy: He 1131 + xara-copifopar, [in LXX: Ex 1! (g5n hith.), Jth 51, 10'°*;] to deal craftily with, outwit: Ac 71° GXX),+ ** xata-oréddo, [in LXX: m Mac 4%!, m1 Mac 61*;] 1. to let down, lower. 2. to keep down, restrain: c. acc., Ac 19% 36+ MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 239 **t katd-oTmpa, -Tos, 76 (kabiornm), [in LXX: 11 Mac 54 (-ena, A) * 5] 1. condition, of health, etc. 2. demeanour: Tit 28 (for exx. v. Field, Notes, 220).t kata-oTohy, -fs, 7 (, ete. ;] over against, opposite, before: 4 x. képn, Lk 19°"; as prep., c. gen., Mt 21? 2724 (dx-, WH, mg.), Mk 11? 124! (az-, WH, mg.) 13%; metaph., before, seq. Oeot, Ro 41", 11 Co 217 1219+ tratevdmov, adv. (= Hom., xarévw7ra), [in LXX: Ps 43 (44)¥, al.;] over against, before: c. gen., +. ddéys, Ju74; metaph. (ef. xatévavtt, and v. Lift., Col., l.c.), 7. Geod, Eph 14, Col 17?.+ * xat-efouordtw, to exercise authority over: c. gen. pers., Mt 20%, Mk 10%2.+ SYN.: xataxvpievw (v. Swete, Wk., l.c.). kat-epydétouar (emphatic form of épydéfoua), [in LXX for byp, etc. (9 exx., each for a different Heb. word);] to effect by labour, achieve, work out, bring about: c. acc., Ro 415 53 75 15:17 18,20 17 Co 710, Eph 618, Ja 1; pass., 1 Co 12"; c. ace. rei et dat. pers., Ro 713, um Co 47 711 9; id. seq. did, c. gen. pers., Ro 1518; +. cwrnpiay, Ph! 2!2; c. acc. pers. seq. eis, U Co 5° (RV, wrought); of evil deeds, Ro 127 29, 1 Co 53, 1 Pe 43.+ ** xar-épxopat, [in LXX: To 1 ~ 2}, Es 3, Wi 11”, 1 Mac 1129*;] to come down, go down: seq. «is, Lk 451, Ac 8° 134 15°° 191, T; dad, Lk 937, Ac 151 185 2119; do et eis, Ac 1127 121°; of coming to port by ship, Ac 18 21% 27°; seq. pds, c. acc. pers., Ac 9°?; metaph., of gifts from God, Ja 3!°.t kat-eo0iw (‘‘ perfective” comp. of ecOiw, q.v., and cf. M, Pr., 111), [in LXX chiefly for 55 ;] to eat up, devour: c. acc., of seed, Mt 134, Mk 44, Lk 85; séxvov, Re 124; BiBrapidvov, Re 10% 1°; metaph., MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 241 oixias, Mt 2318, Mk 124°, Lk 2047; 7. Biov, Lk 1539; c. acc. pers., Jo 217 (LEX), 11 Co 1129, Ga 515, Re 115 209.t kat-ev0dvw, [in LXX for Pid ni., hi. etc.;] to make or keep straight, direct, guide: metaph., r. ddov, 1 Th 31!; +. wddas eis 6d5dv eipyvys, Lk 179; +. xapdias eis t. dyarnv, 11 Th 3°.t **t kat-eudoyéw, -@, [in LXX: To 11417*;] to bless fervently: ME 10?° (v. Swete, in 1.).+ *t kat-ep-iornpt, to rise wp against: Ac 18}2.+ xat-éxw, [in LXX for nN, pin hi., etc.;] 1. perfective of gw (M, Pr., 116; M, Th., 155), (a) to possess, hold fast: Lk 81, Jo 5!4), Ro 118 (Lft., Notes, 251), 1 Co 7°° 11, 11 Co 6", 1 Th 571, He 36 14 1023; (b) to lay hold of, get possession of: Lk 14°. 2. to hold back, detain, restrain (M, Th., 156 f.): ¢. acc. seq. rod wy c. inf., Lk 44; seq. zpos, ec. ace., Phm}8; absol., 7d xaréyov (6 x.), 1 Th 257, 3, Intrans., as nautical term, to put in, make for (LS, s.v.): Ac 272°.+ katnyopéw, -@ (<< xard, ayopevw), [in LXX: Da LXX 65'6), 1 Mac 7% 25, 11 Mac 447 101%)21, rv Mac 914*;] to make accusation, accuse, (a) in general: absol., Ro 21°; c. gen. pers. (cl., WM, 254), Jo 54°; irreg. c. acc. pers., Re 121°; (b) before a judge: absol., Ac 2419; ¢, gen. pers., Mt 121°, Mk 3%, Lk 67 11° (WH, tzxt., R, om.), 23719, Jo 816], Ac 25° 281°; id. c. ace. rei (cl., but v. WM, l.c.), Mk 15%» 4; ¢. gen. rei (Dem.), Ac 248 2511; seq. epi, c. gen. rei (Thuc., viii, 85), Ac 2418; ¢. ace. rei, Seq. xard c. gen. pers. (WM, § 28, 1), Lk 2314. Pass. (Bl., § 54, 3), seq. id c. gen., Mt 27, Ac 22°9; 6 xarnyopovmevos, Ac 2516+ *xatnyopia, -as, (<(xariyopos), an accusation, charge: c. gen. pers., Jo 18°; seq. xard, c. id., 1 Ti 519; c. gen. rei, Tit 16.+ KaTyyopos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Pr 18!” (a), 1 Mac 45*;] an accuser: Ac 233035 248 (WH, R, txt. om.) 2516 18 + *t xamhywp, Oo (Aram. 1792; Dalman, Gr., 185; but v. Deiss., LAE, 90 f.), = xaryyopos, an accuser: Re 12}°.+ ; * xamipea, -as, 7 (; Hort on Ja 1°): absol., 1 Co 191@XX) 47 133, nm Co 1013) 17 XX) 1116,18 191,56, Hph 2°, Ja 416; c, acc. rei, m Co 9° 11°; seq. ev (LXX), Ro 2” 53, 1 Co 371, m1 Co 5! 10'5 11” 1259, Ga 61314, Ja 19; & (r.) Ged, Ro 27 545 ev xupiw, I Co 181 @X%), 1 Co 1017 CX); ev X. Incot, Phil 3°; seq. eri, c. dat., Ro 5’; wep/, c. gen., 11 Co 108; eis, ib. 16; Srép, c. gen. pers., 1 Co 7!* 125; évwrov +r. Geod, 1 Co 1% (cf. €v-, kata-kavxdouar).t kauxnpa, -Tos, TO () al ee potter's clay. 2. an earthen vessel. 3. a tile: Lk 5!9,t kepdvvuue, [in LXX for Jon, Is 5%, al.;] to mix, mingle, chiefly of the diluting of wine: Re 18°; by oxymoron, xexepdopevos dxpartos, Re 141.+ SYN.: piyvyps. x. implies “a mixing of two things, so that they are blended and form a compound, as in wine and water, whereas up. implies a mixing without such composition, as in two sorts of grain” (LS, 8.v. xpaous). képas, -atos (pl. not irreg. as in Attic), ro, [in LXX chiefly for 1272;] @ horn: Re 5° 128 13111 17%) 7,12,16; of the projections at the corners of the altar (Ex 29", al.): Re 918. Metaph., as symbol of strength, x. swrypias (cf. Ps 17 (18), al.): Lk 169+ * xepdtiov, -ov, 76 (dimin. of xépas), 1. a little horn (Arist.). 2. In pl. (the fruit of the xeparéa), carob-pods : Lk 151°,+ ** xepdaivw, [in Sm.: Jb 22°*;] to gain: ec. acc., Mt 2516 17, 20, 22, t. xoopov, Mt 1676, Mk 886, Lk 9°; absol., to make profit, get gain: Ja 48, Metaph., c. ace. rei, to save oneself from, avoid: Ac 2771 (Field, Notes, 145); c. acc. pers., to gain, win: Mt 18%, 1 Co 91922, Phl 38; pass., 1 Pe 31.+ ** xépdos, -eos (-ovs), 7d, [in Aq.: Hz 274; Sm.: Ps 29 (30), al. ;] gain: Ph) 1?) 37, Tit 114+ kepéa, V.S. Kepaia. * xéppa, -Tos, TO (| seq. eis, Mikvise ot luk 4s try ete iva, Mk 612; ¢. inf., Ro 2?!; «. Xpurrov, "Incoty, Ac 8° 979 1913, 1 Co 128 15”, 11 Co 119 114, Ph] 12°, 1 Ti 316 (cf. rpo-xnpioow). kijTos, -eos (-ovs), 7d, [in LXX: Jh 241! (37), Ge 17! (73M), ete. ;] a huge fish, sea-monster : Mt 124° @XX)+ Knoas, -a (v. Bl, §10, 3), 6 (Aram. NBD), Cephas, ie. Peter: Tey it tel Oop ee coe TSN (Ges IEA MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 247 kiBords, -od, 7, [in LXX: Ge 6-9 (ARM), elsewhere, very freq., as Ex 25°"), for 7198 ;] a wooden box or chest: of Noah’s ark, Mt 24°, Lk 177’, He 117, 1 Pe 37°; of the ark of the covenant, He 94, Re 1129.+ xOdpa, -as, 7, [in LXX chiefly for 9133, freq. in Pss (32 (33)?, al.) ; and in Da (8°, al.) for Dany, itself a transliteration of xiOapis, the Homeric form of x. (cf. CB, Dn., lviii);] a lyre, harp: 1 Co 14’, Re 58 14? 152+ kBapifw, [in LXX: Is 2316 (733 pi.) *;] to play wpon the lyre or harp: 1 Co 14’, Re 142.+ * xiBap-wdds, -00, 6 (<< xOdpa, doidds, a singer), one who plays and sings to the lyre, a harper: Re 14? 18%2.+ Kudtxia, -as, 7, Cilicia, a province of Asia Minor: Ac 6° 15% 4! 2139 223 2334 275, Ga 121.+ KUVGELwpoV, V.S. KLVVapLwWpLOV. kuvBuvedw (<< xivduvos), [in LXX for wp ni., ete.;] 1. to be daring, to venture. 2. to be in danger: Lk 878, Ac 1977 49, 1 Co 1599.+ kiv8uvos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: Ps 114 (116)? (M¥), Si 3°, al.;] danger, peril: Ro 85; pl., 1 Co 1176+ xwéw, -0, [in LXX for y3 hi., wan, etc.;] to set in motion, move: Mt 234; +. xepadyv (Ps 21 (22)8, al.), Mt 2739, Mk 159; pass. (cf. Ge 771), Ac 1728. 2. to remove: Re 2° 614. 3. to excite, stir up: Ac 245; pass., 21°° (cf. nera-, ouv-Kivew).t kivnats, -ews, 9 (n3 ; S312 ;] a lot; (a) that which is cast or drawn: Mt 27%, Mk 154, Lk 2334, Jo 1974 (XX), Ac 126; (6) that which is obtained by casting: Ac 1!” 871; of a part in the Kingdom of God (cf. Wi 5°), Ac 2618, Col 132; pl. of the “cure” of a presbyter, 1 Pe 5° (v. ICC, in 1.).t kAypdw, -G, [in LXX: 1 Ki 144 (455 ni.), Es 44 A (N"Pp ni.), Is 174. *;] 1. to cast lots. 2. to choose by lot. 3. to assign by lot, assign a portion: pass., €v d kal exAnpdOnwev, Eph 11! (on the various interpretations, v. [CC ; AR; Ellic., in 1.).+ khijots, -ews, 7 (kaw), [in LXX: Je 38 (31)° (Np), Jth 121° A, mt Mac 5!**;] a calling, call; in NT, always of the Divine call to salvation: Ro 117%, 1 Co 126 729, Kph 138 414, Phi 314, mn Th 11), mm Ti 19, He 3}, 1 Pe 11° (Cremer, 332).t kyrés, -7, -ov (<(xadéw), [in LXX for nap, NWO, Ex 1216, al.;] called, invited (as to a banquet, Adsch., 1 Ki 141, 1 Mac 514); in NT, always of the Divine call; (a) to some office: x. dadarodos, Ro 1}, 1 Co 1; (d) to salvation: Ro 878, 1 Co 14, Ju}; x. wai éxAexrol kK. morot, Re 174; in gosp. (not in pl., v.s. cadéw) disting. fr. exAexrds, Mt 20!° (WH, txt., R, omit), 2214; x. “Inaod Xp., Ro 15; x. dyin, saints by calling, Ro 1’, 1 Co 17.+ k\iBavos, -ov, 6 (Att., xpiB-, but «A- in Ion., Hadt., ii, 92), [in LXX for "3m, Ge 1517, Ho 7*°, al.;] 1. in el., a clibanus, cribanus, an earthen vessel for baking bread. 2. In LXX and NT, a furnace (cf. MM, Hap., xv), an oven: Mt 69°, Lk 128.t kNipa, -Tos, TO ( 1, Trott . Kowwvds, -7, -6v (<< xowwds), [in LXX: Pr 2874, Is 178 (727), Ma 214 (n73n), Es 8', al.;] 1. as adj., = xowds. 2. As subst., 6, 9 x., (a) a partner, associate, companion: 11 Co 8%, Phm?"; ce. dat. pers., Lk 51°; c. gen. pers., He 10%; id. seq. ev, Mt 23°°; (b) a partaker, sharer: c. gen. rei, 1 Co 10!8 29, 11 Co 17, 1 Pe 5}, 1 Pe 1* (v. Deiss., BS, 368 n,).t koitn, -7s, 7 (in Hom., xotros), [in LXX chiefly for dwn, also for Masw, etc.;] a bed: Lk 11"; esp. the marriage-bed : x. dpiavtos, He 134; x. éyew, of a woman conceiving, Ro 91° (cf. peculiar phrases in LXX, Le 15}8, al.); of illicit intercourse, pl., Ro 131%.t Kouta, -@vos, 6 (<< Koirn; = Att., dwudtuoy, Vv. Kennedy, Sources, 40), [in LXX chiefly for V7q, u Ki 4’, Jl 216.1 Hs 33, al.;] a bed- chamber ; 6 ert rod x., a chamberlain: Ac 12°°.+ tkéxkwvos, -, -ov (<< xdxxos, as used of the “berry” of the ilex coccifera, v. DB, iv, 416), [in LXX for my din , yin, Iw, Ex 254, Ge 3878, Is 118, al.;] scarlet: Mt 2728, He 919, Re 17°; neut., without substantive, of clothing, Re 174 18!*)16,+ 252 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT kéxxos, -ov, 6, [in LXX: La 45 BNR (ydim), Si 45" *;] a grain: Mt 138! 1720, Mk 431, Lk 1319 176, Jo 1274, 1 Co 1537.+ KoddLw (<< xdAos, docked), [in LXX: Da 6") (no Heb.), 1 Es 874, Wi 34 (and freq.), 1 Mac 7’, al.;] 1. to curtail, dock, prune. 2. to check, restrain. 3. to chastise, correct, punish: pass., 11 Pe 2°; mid., cause to be punished (1 Mac 7%): Ac 471.+ *xodakia (Rec. -efa), -as, 97 ( 983 (vy. Swete, Mk., 24, and cf. xAivy).t kpdfw, [in LXX for pyt, PY, NWP, etc. 3] in cl. chiefly poét., 1. prop. onomatop., of the raven, to croak, hence generally, of inartic. cries, to scream, cry out (Aisch., al.) : Mk 55 9261539 (Rec., R, mg.), Lk 930, al.; of crying for vengeance (cf. Ge 41°), Ja 54. 2. to cry, call 256 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT out with a loud voice: c. acc. rei, Ac 19"; seq. orat. dir., Mk 1048, Lk 18°, al.; (€v) dwory peyddAyn, Mk 57, Re 14”, al.; A€ywv, Mt 8°, al.; of public teaching, Jo 11°, Ro 92’, al.; of importunate prayer (cf. Jb 35”, Ps 3°, al.), Ro 84, Ga 4°; pf. with pres. sense (vernac.; M, Pr., 147), Jo 15, SYN.: v.s. Bodo. * xpaumddn (kperddn, WH), -ns, 4 (cf. xpartaddw for 7Du, Is 24*° 29°), drunken nausea (EV, surfeiting): Lk 21°4.t SYN. : xpos, revelling ; wébn, drunkeness ; oivoddAvyia, a debauch ; motos, a drinking bout (v. Tr., Syn., § xi). ; kpaviov, -ov, TO (, Re 16 §13,+ kpauydLw (<( xpavyy), [in LXX: mu Es 318 (gy hi.) *;] = xpdlo, 1. of animals, to bay, to croak, etc. 2. Of men, to cry out, shout: MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT 257 Mt 1219, Jo 1213 1915, Ac 2228; seq. A€ywv, Jo 184° 19% 12; Kat A€ywr, Lk 44! (WH, xpa£-); dwvy weyadrn, Jo 114 (cf. Abbott, JV, 269 f.).t kpavyy, -7s, 7, [in LXX for Apy¥, AYIA, AyIwW, etc.;] crying, outcry, clamour: Mt 25°, Lk 14, Ac 23°, Eph 4%!, He 5’, Re 214.t kpéas, -éws, pl., xpéa, [in LXX for "wa (freq.);] flesh, meat: Ro 14#!, r Co 813.+ kpeiloowy (Epic and old Att.) and xpeirrwy (later Att.), prop. comparat. of xparvs, strong, but in sense often (as in cl., v. LS, s.v.) as comparat. of dyads, [in LXX chiefly for 311 ;] better ; (a) as to ad- vantage or usefulness: 1 Co 1117, He 114° 1274; wodAAG paAdrov x., Phl 123; xpetoocov rovetv, 1 Co 738; éoriw, seq. inf., 1 Co 7%, 11 Pe 27); (b) as to excellence: He 14 69 77 1% 22 86 925 1034 111635; «. gor, seq. inf,, 1 Pe 317,+ kpépapat, V.S. Kpeuavvupe. kpepdvvupt (also kpepavviw, kpenaw; the pres. is not found in NT), [in LXX (where also xpeudfw, Jb 267) chiefly for mbm ;] trans., to hang, suspend: c. acc. pers., seq. émi &Aov, Ac 5°° 10°; pass., Lk 2339; seq. wept, Mt 18°. Mid., xpéuapa, intrans., to hang: seq. éx, Ac 281; éri &Aov, Ga 313 EXX); metaph., seq. ev, Mt 224°.t kpetadn, V.S. Kparradn. Kpnpvds, -00, 6 ( (pass., Mt 13*4, Col 3°); pass., Mt 544, He 11”, 1 Ti 5%, Re 217; éxpv¥@y (on the tense and its forma- tion, v. M, Pr., 161; Bl., § 19, 3) x. eéjrAdev, Jo 859; seq. cis, Lk 137}, Re 6; do (in cl. more freq. dupl. acc.), Re 616; pass., Jo 1236, (BI., §34, 4). Metaph.: Mt 11° 1355, Lk 1152, WH, mg., 184 1942, Jo 19°8 (cf. amro-, €v-, jepi-KpUTTw).t *t kpuotaddtLw (<< kpvoradXos), to shine like crystal, be crystal-clear : Re 21" (dar. Aey.).t Kp¥otalhos, -ov, 6 (<< xpvos, frost), [in LXX: Jb 3879, Ps 147% (7), Ez 1”? (mp), ete.;] crystal: Re 4° 221+ Kpupaios, -aia, -aiov (, also for niv3, 155, InN, etc.;] 1. to take, lay hold of: absol., Mt 2626, Mk 14”; c. acc. rei, Mt 549 96°, al. mult. ; c. acc. pers., Mt 17°) Mk 12%, ‘al; pleonastic AaBwv (M, Pr., 230; Bl., § 74, 2), Mt 1331 14, al.; so " also indic., Mk 727, Jo 191:40, Re 8°, al.; metaph., c. acc. rei, ddoppyy, Ro 75); imdderypa, Ja 510; id. c. ace. pers., ddoBos, Lk 716 ; mvedpa, Lk 989 metpacpos, I Co 10!%; aoristic pf. (M, Pr., 145, 238; Bl., § 59, 4), Re st 8°, al. 2. to receive: absol., opp. to aireiy, Mt 78, al. ; Secale Mt 108, Ac 20*5 ; ¢. ace. rei, Mt 276, Mk 10°, al. mult.; e. ace. pers., Jo g2l 137° 1977, 1 Jo}; pariopacw (a vulgarism; Bl., § 38, 3), Mk 14%; metaph., tr. Adyov, Mt 137°, Mk 416; +, paprupiav, Jo 345 7. fyyara, 264 MANUAL GREEK LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT Jo 1248; zpécwrov (Heb. 0°38 Niv3; Dalman, Words, 30), Lk 2071, Ga 2°; wiv aiwvoyv (Dalman, op. cit., 124 f.), Mk 10°° (ef. ava-, dvr, OvV-avTt~ (-ar), amro-, €Trl-, KaTQ-, META, Tapa-, CvV-Tapa-, Wpo-, TpO0d~, ovv-, ovv-rept-, U7o-hapBavw). Adpex, 6, indecl. (Heb. 9b), Lamech (Ge 5%): Lk 3%6.+ appa, V.S. Aapd. hapmds, -d8os, 7 (